Greater Manchester Fringe Festival 2018 Preview

One Man Bond

Manchester is famous for being a hive of creativity and a place where lots of amazing things begin. Now in its sixth year, The Greater Manchester Fringe runs throughout July, filling the city with fresh and exciting comedy and drama, much of which is on its way to the better known Fringe Festival in Scotland. Let’s take a look at some of the cult entertainment style shows on offer in 2018. And don’t forget to visit STARBURST’s favourite bar, Fab Café, for some pre-show drinks beforehand.

Moon QuestCasagua Productions – July 6th & 7th, 3MT. July 9 & 10th, Kings Arms: Theatre
We are always up for a bit of pulp sci-fi, and Moon Quest looks set to deliver. Gabi is an ace pilot and intrepid spacewoman, sent to Mars to find a lost explorer. On her way she’ll meet strange aliens and become part of an insurrection. Moon Quest is inspired by the likes of Star Crash, Flash Gordon and Moon Zero Two. Sounds like fantastic fun to us.

One Man Bond –  Invisible Six Productions – July 17th, 18th & 19th, Kings Arms: Theatre
Every Bond film in 60 minutes. Brian Gorman plays over 200 characters, including every James Bond from Sean Connery to Daniel Craig. We loved this show when we saw it at 2018’s STARBURST Media City Festival, so if you missed it, here’s your chance to catch it again. Watch one man throw himself into the world of Bond. Brilliantly entertaining stuff. Features an ultra-realistic Daniel Craig.

Quina Chapman: Fan GirlMissQuinaC – July 19th & 20th, Kings Arms Studio
A light-hearted look at music and fandom, Fan Girl combines storytelling, poetry and original live music with tales from real-life super fans. Featuring scientific facts, a history lesson and a cameo from The Beatles. Utterly compelling stuff and a must for those with a fannish heart.

Pretty EvilHivemind Theatrical Solutions – July 4th, 27th & 28th, 53two
When the superheroes clean up all the crime, what’s left for their former foes? Three wannabes hire a local community centre and workshop giving evil a new face. When good triumphs, evil has to work on its CV. A play about three villains who haven’t a clue. Sounds like a good chuckle to us.

Chaos of DelightRobin Ince – July 10th, International Anthony Burgess Foundation
A work-in-progress from the funny one out of The Infinite Monkey Cage. Robin is back on the road with his latest show, and among his experimental subjects are the lovely theatre-going people of Manchester. The multiple-award-winning comedian mashes up the two cultures of art and science, going from Dali to DNA.

The Girl in the Grate/Me, You & Godzilla TooCathianne Hall – July 5th, 3MT
Join Cathianne Hall and Jowanna Rose in a double-bill. From the sinister world of 1960s sitcoms to the party from hell, it’s a Babycham-fuelled journey into what it means to feel trapped, and how one makes the great escape. Expect more than a few surprises.

The SéanceAndous Productions – July 5th, 6th & 7th, 53two
We do like a good ghost story. This one is about love, loss, soulmates and dodgy toasters. Danny’s dead, but that’s not going to stop him from defying the laws of universe so he can make his beloved Kate his lawfully wedded widow.

Constellations – Ensemble Estate – July 9th, 10th & 11th, 53Two
A love story between a beekeeper and quantum physicist? Where each scene takes place in a parallel universe? Sounds like exactly our sort of thing. Constellations is the story of Roland and Marianne, which asks questions about love, fate, classic models of the universe, and bees. An intimate play by the award-winning Nick Payne.

Burn the Witch Norris & Parker – July 11th & 12th, Kings Arms: Theatre
Weird. Odd. Deeply Funny. From the team who brought you the award-winning See You at the Gallows, Burn the Witch promises to be a late-night sketch comedy for lovers of the strange, the sordid, the musical and the dark. The witching hour is upon you. For those who like their comedy dark and clever.

Conspiracy Theory: A Lizard’s TaleHalf Chips/Half Rice – July 26th, 27th, 28th & 29th, 53two
One man’s journey into the world of lizards and denial, the truth may be out there, but it’s probably nowhere near the characters in this cracking bit of Fringe theatre. A revised version of last year’s critically acclaimed show.

Questions of EnglandRampant Plays – July 2nd, 8th, 16th, 23rd & 30th, The Whiskey Jar (Free Entry)
Experimental improv comedy, which uses British pop culture and history? There’s bound to be something for everyone in all of that. Includes a bell you can ring for attention. Wouldn’t be a Fringe Festival without this sort of improv.

How to Survive a Zombie Apocalypse Narthen Productions – July 19th, 20th & 21st, Kings Arms TheatreLife seems pretty much sorted for Phil (job, partner and Coach holidays) and Mark (girlfriend, potholing and zombie films). Time may be ticking – but it’s a tick easily ignored. Dare they face their own personal zombie apocalypse?

For more details on all of this and so much more, be sure to visit GreaterManchesterFringe.co.uk.

[ENDED] Win a SKULDUGGERY PLEASANT Set – Including New Book MIDNIGHT

Skulduggery Pleasant Midnight

Skulduggery Pleasant, the bestselling and award-winning series continues with publication of Midnight on May 31st. The eleventh book in Derek Landy’s comic-fantasy-adventure series sees Skulduggery, the wise-cracking skeleton of a dead magician and his sidekick Valkyrie Cain in their most gripping story yet. And even better, we have five sets of the entire series to give away – and that includes the latest book, Midnight!

To be in with a chance of winning one of these fantastic sets, simply answer the question below.

The titular character, Skullduggery Pleasant has many interesting characteristics. Which of the following is true? Is he:
a) Ghost Rider’s Second Cousin
b) A former member of The Grateful Dead
c) A living skeleton and elemental magic user
Email your answer, along with your address details, to [email protected], with the subject line Skulduggery Pleasant before midnight on Sunday, June 3rd.

Skulduggery Pleasant

To give you a flavour of what to expect, here’s the official blurb for Midnight:
Skulduggery Pleasant and Valkyrie Cain are back in their most gripping story yet, as book 11, Midnight, picks up where Resurrection left off – and runs.

For years, Valkyrie Cain has struggled to keep her loved ones safe from harm, plunging into battle – time and time again – by Skulduggery Pleasant’s side, and always emerging triumphant.

But now the very thing that Valkyrie fights for is in danger, as a ruthless killer snatches her little sister in order to lure Valkyrie into a final confrontation. With Skulduggery racing to catch up and young sorcerer Omen scrambling along behind, Valkyrie only has twelve hours to find Alice before it’s too late. The clock is ticking…

[ENDED] Win a Dual Format Edition of David Cronenberg’s eXistenZ

eXistenz

With 101 Films having given David Cronenberg’s classic eXistenZ its UK Blu-ray debut to kickstart their Black Label banner, we’ve got three copies of this hotly anticipated Dual Format release to give away to some lucky readers.

To be in with a chance of winning a copy of eXistenZ, simply answer the below question:

eXistenZ director David Cronenberg did NOT direct which of these movies?

a) The Fly

b) Scream

c) Videodrome

Email your answer, along with your address details, to [email protected] labelled eXistenZ before midnight on Sunday, June 3rd.

eXistenz

The official word on this new release of Cronenberg’s 1999 picture reads:

Visionary director David Cronenberg (Videodrome) challenges the boundaries of reality in sci-fi thriller eXistenZ. During a closed-door demonstration of her new virtual reality video game, brilliant game designer Allegra Geller survives an attempt on her life by a crazed assassin. On the run with Ted Pikul, a young marketing trainee who falls into the role of bodyguard, Allegra convinces Ted to join her in her game, eXistenZ. As the line between fantasy and reality begins to blur, the real-life dangers they sought to escape start to merge with their virtual world.

eXistenZ stars Jennifer Jason Leigh (Annihilation), Jude Law (The Talented Mr. Ripley), and a stellar supporting cast including Ian Holm (Alien), Willem Dafoe (Platoon), Christopher Eccleston (28 Days Later) and Sarah Polley (Splice).

Special Features

Brand New Extras

  • The Leader: An interview with Christopher Eccleston
  • Commentary with Kim Newman and Ryan Lambie
  • Commentary with Mondo Digital’s Nathaniel Thompson
  • Limited edition booklet includes: ‘Enemy of Reality: David Cronenberg’s eXistenZ’ by Alex Morris, and ‘Of Fabrics and Flesh: An interview with Denise Cronenberg’ by Phillip Escott.

Additional Extras

  • Audio commentary by David Cronenberg
  • Making-of documentary
  • Promo Featurette
  • Special Effects Featurette
  • Backstage interviews with Jude Law, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Willem Dafoe, Jim Isaac (visual effects) and David Cronenberg
  • Trailer

[ENDED] Win a Dual Format Edition of BREAKHEART PASS

Breakheart Pass

Who doesn’t love a classic Western overflowing with murder mystery? And now, with Eureka Entertainment giving the Charles Bronson-starring Breakheart Pass its first ever UK Blu-ray release as part of their new Dual Format edition of the 1975 film, we’ve got three copies of the release to give away to some lucky readers.

To be in with a chance of winning one of these fantastic prizes, simply answer the below question:

Breakheart Pass star Charles Bronson famously played Paul Kersey in which action-centric franchise?

a) Die Hard

b) Death Wish

c) John Wick

Email your answer, along with your address details, to [email protected] labelled Breakheart Pass before midnight on Sunday, June 3rd.

To give you an idea of what to expect from this classic mysterious Western, be sure to check out the trailer for this release below:

The official word on Eureka’s hotly anticipated Dual Format release of Breakheart Pass reads:

An action-packed mystery western based on the best-selling novel by Alistair MacLean (The Guns of Navarone, Ice Station Zebra, Where Eagles Dare), Breakheart Pass throws open the throttle for runaway excitement!

At the height of the frontier era, a locomotive races through the Rocky Mountains on a classified mission to a remote Army post. But one by one, the passengers are being murdered. Their only hope is John Deakin (Charles Bronson, Hard Times, The Magnificent Seven), a mysterious prisoner-in-transit who must fight for his life – and the lives of everyone on the train – as he uncovers a deadly secret that explodes in a torrent of shocking revelations, explosive brawls and blazing gun battles.

With a rousing score by Jerry Goldsmith and a powerful supporting cast that includes Ben Johnson (The Last Picture Show), Richard Crenna (First Blood) and Jill Ireland (Hard Times), Eureka Classics is proud to present Breakheart Pass for the first time on Blu-ray in the UK in a special Dual Format edition.

BREAKHEART PASS, an exhilarating murder-mystery western starring Charles Bronson, is available now for the first time on Blu-ray in the UK, in a Dual Format (Blu-ray & DVD) edition and can be purchased here.

ISSUE 449 – OUT NOW!

449

 

STARBURST pays a visit to the ruined island of Isla Nublar to find out what we can expect from JURASSIC WORLD: FALLEN KINGDOM. We also stay with the theme as we look at the use of cloning in the movies.

We also look forward to the return of our favourite animated superhero family in INCREDIBLES 2, and delve into the life of the author of FRANKENSTEIN ahead of the biopic MARY SHELLEY. We also examine serial killers on the big screen in anticipation of MY FRIEND DAHMER. If that’s not all, we interview LIN SHAYE, who tells us all about INSIDIOUS: THE LAST KEY.

There are also celebrations in order as we look back at THE BEATLES’ psychedelic classic YELLOW SUBMARINE as it turns fifty and a pair of RAY HARRYHAUSEN’s timeless fantasies come under our spotlight.

In our regular features, we take a look at the intriguing RADIUS, heading to HORROR CHANNEL, and Independents Day talks to the director of the fun British film CANNIBALS AND CARPET FITTERS.

Plus all your favourite COLUMNS, NEWS, REVIEWS and much MORE from the worlds of SCI-FI, HORROR and FANTASY!

Stefan Kapicic | DEADPOOL 2

Stefan Kapicic Colossus Deadpool 2

After years spinning its wheels, Deadpool finally made it to the big screen in 2016, wowing audiences and changing the superhero game. But while Ryan Reynolds’ Merc with a Mouth was the star attraction, many were equally as drawn in by the inclusion of iconic X-Men member Colossus. With Deadpool 2 hitting UK screens imminently, we caught up with the truly charming Stefan Kapicic – the man behind Colossus – to discuss this most hotly anticipated of sequels, his history as a huge comic book nerd, what may lie ahead for Colossus in the future, working with Ryan Reynolds, and so, so much more.

STARBURST: In terms of screen time and importance to the story, what can you tell us about the role of Colossus this time out in Deadpool 2?

Stefan Kapicic: After the first part, Colossus definitely became one of the fan favourites. I can’t talk a lot about the plot, but Colossus is involved in a big plot. I know the fans are going to be extremely happy in how we’re portraying Colossus, one of the iconic X-Men. The beautiful thing is the relationship between Colossus and Deadpool is being upgraded. Colossus is like a father figure, a big brother figure. He’s an old school superhero who is trying to get Deadpool on the right side. He knows that Deadpool has a good heart and that he can become an X-Men, he can become a real hero. That’s one of the missions that Colossus has in the comic books, and now in Deadpool 2 he’s still going to be pursuing that. In the trailers, Colossus says, “You have a good heart, we’re training you to become an X-Men.” So from that point of the plot, you will see Colossus still trying to get Deadpool to become a good person.

You’re a self-confessed massive comic book nerd. Which comic book characters would you highlight as your personal favourites growing up?

I was born in Germany but I’m originally from the ex-Yugoslavia, so we had a big influence from Italian comic books and European comic books like Corto Maltese or Sergio Bonelli. But then again, you get your first love with DC and Marvel Comics. As a kid, I used to like Superman and Batman, but Batman was my favourite. I can still remember when I got my first Marvel comic books. My grandpa bought them for me, these original comic books, and I remember the first one I grabbed was Wolverine #50. It’s a yellow front page with his claws tearing through the page. That’s when I fell in love with Wolverine and, of course, right away with the X-Men. So as a comic book geek, for me, having the chance to portray a character like Colossus, I’ve said it many times but it’s like an Academy Award for me. We all dream when we are kids to become a superhero, and I got this chance. It’s two years from the first Deadpool. This movie changed my life, Colossus as a character definitely changed my life, and this dream’s still going on. Sometimes I’m pinching myself, trying to understand if this is really happening to me. For a lot of actors, being a superhero or comic book character is just like a job. For me, it’s something really emotional. It combines the beauty of my job and my dreams, my childhood dreams. My first love was comic books, before even movies and theatre and acting it was comic books. It’s something for me that’s a dream that’s still going on.

Deadpool Colossus

Upon landing the Colossus role, did you go back and read any particular arcs to pull inspiration from?

I was really, really familiar with the X-Men and Colossus, but when I got the role I sat down with Tim Miller, the director of the first Deadpool. He’s a huge comic book geek. When you go his studios – Blur Studios – you can see a huge wall full of comic books. He knows every single character from the beginning to the end, so we were combining our comic book geek knowledge to see and find the perfect Colossus behaviour, characteristics, the voice, the accent. When we talk now, you can see I have an accent but it’s still not the Russian accent we have for Colossus. Tim Miller wanted to be honest to the comic books, that’s why we made, as fans say today, the perfect Colossus. Fans were not satisfied in how he’d been done in the X-Men franchise, so now they finally got their Colossus. Thank god he didn’t have that much time in the X-Men franchise as otherwise it would maybe be a different sort of character. But thanks to that, we got to make the Colossus people love. In the first part I did some CGI but mainly the voice. Now in the sequel, you can see the difference. Now I do everything, so you can see the face mapping, the facial expressions, and of course the voice. It was mine, Tim’s and Ryan’s creation, but now I’m much more Colossus. I’m really proud and I think we did an amazing job for the sequel. I really am, I’m just so proud and grateful to god and to Fox. I was working with Ryan Reynolds that much more closely, and we did so many new things to Colossus. I had so much help from Ryan Reynolds. Working with him is one of the best things in my career.

As alluded to, this time out you were a lot more involved with the motion capture side of Colossus in addition to the voice. What element would you say was more challenging?

In this situation, it was both at the same time. I’m a theatre actor first of all, so I started my career in theatre. This is so much like a theatre role. It was hard at the beginning because I was new to this. I did ADR [Automated Dialogue Replacement] but this is not like ADR, this is something that you’re creating; the character that will later be done through CGI and through computers. So I had to do all the fights, all the action so many times, but the beauty of the work is your working with something and talking these lines: these famous comic book lines. Sometimes people are talking about how it’s a superhero character so it’s not Shakespeare. But you know, I’m going to say this and I’m going to stand behind this, sometimes comic book characters are exactly the same as Shakespeare’s characters. You can make them real, you can justify them. This is a superhero being, not an ordinary person. Plus, with the voice you have to bring this soul. If you see my face and see me as a person, it would be much easier because you could see my real face and my facial expressions. In this way, it was such a big, big job to do. I’ve seen the final version and I’m so proud at what we did.

Deadpool Colossus

Being such a huge fan of Colossus, of the X-Men, was there a pinpoint moment where it hit you that “I’m a superhero!”, that this is real?

Man, I don’t want to sound funny but it’s happening every single day. Even this morning when I woke up. The movie is coming in a few days in the UK and a little bit later in the States. I’m thanking god every single morning when I wake up that I have this chance. I realise it, I get so happy, then I’m “is this real?” With this role, in the first movie we expected it to be a great film but we didn’t know that there would be this craze from the fans, this unbelievable marketing that Fox is coming out with, but we didn’t expect to become a record-breaking movie, especially because we’re R-rated. We’re not like Avengers: Infinity War where you can bring kids, we’re R-rated. So this success for an R-rated movie is unbelievable. I’m always saying how thankful I am, but it’s something that nobody expected so that’s why it seems like a dream.

There’s a lot of people returning for Deadpool 2, from screenwriters Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick, to Morena Baccarin, TJ Miller, Leslie Uggams, Briana Hilderbrand, and Karan Soni. Given that, is there almost a family feel to the production?

Yeah, those guys are amazing. The thing is, this cast, especially the cast from the first film, it’s like a family. I know a lot of actors will say that because it happens, it’s part of our job, but we were doing a movie full of action, a movie full of comedy, which makes you feel good every morning when you are going to the set. So you bond. Then you have the success with the first one, everybody that came back from the first part, and, of course, the new additions which are unbelievable! Zazie Beetz totally killed it as Domino. That girl is brilliant. And Josh Brolin, who is a great, amazing actor, and his portrayal of Cable is beautiful. I saw Briana last night, and I’m going and doing these Comic Cons all around the world. A lot of us are doing those. So this Deadpool saga is going great off the screen as much as it goes great on the screen. We’re just one really big, happy family.

David Leitch is on directing duties this time around. How would you describe the differences between him and Tim Miller, or was it a pretty seamless transition between directors?

You can never compare directors because each director brings their own signature. I’m not a person that would compare. Tim Miller started this franchise with Ryan Reynolds and Fox, then we have David Leitch, who is a massive action director. He brought his own signature to this, which people will see. Those are different universes. It’s a totally new view with new paths. I’m really happy how David did his job on this sequel. You will see the reactions to the movie. It’s something totally different. The good thing about Deadpool is when you are waiting for Infinity War you know what to expect. If you know your comic books then you know what to expect, that the story will go this way, it’s really serious, it’s heartbreaking. With Deadpool, you never know what to expect. Trust me, I’m in the movie and I didn’t know what to expect. I got surprised in so many ways, so I cannot wait to see how people will react to so many surprises that they don’t even know that’s going to happen.

Deadpool Colossus

In writing about Deadpool 2 ahead of its release, there are still even now so many question marks, such as the speculation over Jack Kesy’s role or the character played by Julian Dennison, which is quite refreshing to see from a movie these days.

Exactly! Trust me, it’s so well packed and nobody knows what’s going to happen. What you’ve seen so far is maybe 2% of what’s going on in the movie. With Deadpool, you never know what path it’s going to take. It’s a movie that really cannot be compared to anything. It’s its own genre. That’s really rare for you to be able to make a totally new genre. That’s the beauty of it. Of course, nothing really fits without Ryan Reynolds. That guy, I don’t think there would be anybody in the world who could portray Deadpool like Ryan Reynolds. That guy is Deadpool. That’s it, that’s the brilliance of that. This movie is some sort of a gift, it’s something that nobody expects. It’s a feel-good movie. That’s one of the powers of Deadpool, because you will not go out of the movie without laughing a thousand times. This is going to make you feel happy when you’re exiting the theatre. I’m a movie geek too, and in the last few years there’s not many movies where I’ve felt they’ve made my day, made my night, made me forget my problems. They are things that we did with Deadpool. People were crazy for it and were watching it so many times. My mum and dad are in their 60s and they saw Deadpool five or six times. They just loved the movie, they loved the energy, the optimism, and Ryan Reynolds.

For all we know it might happen in this film, but has there been any discussions of having a non-metal Colossus appear at some point in the future?

It was discussed, but right now this if the concept that’s working really well for Deadpool as a franchise. I can’t say anything about that, but it’s something that’s been discussed. The good thing about the UK is that for MCM London – which takes place May 25th to May 27th – myself, Briana and Zazie are going to attend. So that’s ten days after the film is released, so fans can come and that’s really good, that’s beautiful because I’ll be able to talk a lot more about the things that happen in the movie.

Based on how the reception was to Colossus in the first film – and we’re sure it will be just as good this time, if not even better – is there any chance of that character appearing in the main X-Men franchise?

There have been some talks, there’s some things going on, some things developing. There’s always the possibility, especially now with all of this success. You see what the first part brought to Colossus, and then there’s the sequel. It will be worth waiting for. And then, of course, there’s assembling the X-Force in this one. Everything is up to the studio, but then I’m just extremely happy that I have the chance to be a part of this franchise. My biggest reward is the fans’ recognition of Colossus. I’ve done Comic Cons all around the world, and people are just coming and giving me so much praise. It’s really humbling but it just feels so good that you make something like that. Fans can make you or break you. I’m one of the fans, so I don’t like when people destroy a character or its not done well. With this particular thing, we made it right.

Stefan Kapicic Ryan Reynolds

One last question, which isn’t particularly connected to Deadpool 2 or Colossus, but as such a huge comic book fan, whether it’s the X-Men or not, Marvel or not, what are your favourite comic book arcs or stories that you find yourself going back to on a regular basis?

There’s so many! It’s like asking which is your favourite movie of all time. There’s so many arcs that I really love. I don’t want to sound all about X-Men and Marvel, but from Giant-Size X-Men from 1975, the first appearance of the new X-Men with Storm and Nightcrawler, until #126 or #127 of Uncanny X-Men. The whole path of those ones. Maybe #124 as you have Colossus becoming Proletarian. But then again, I even loved Extraordinary X-Men, the new ones. Non-X-Men, I was a huge fan of the Punisher and I loved the Punisher War Zone series. Now you’ve got me, I could talk all day. I’m a huge fan of Preacher. Then again, Frank Miller, c’mon?! And Alan Moore, c’mon?! Every little thing that these guys are doing… Sin City is one of my favourite all-time comic books. Man, you’ve got me. I could talk about this stuff all day long. When I was in Madrid for Comic Con, Frank Miller did for me a sketch of Colossus, which he’s never drawn before. I’ve got this artwork from him of him drawing Colossus for me. There was a portrait, half-face of mine, half-face of Colossus. I’m getting all of this and I just love comic books, so this is unbelievable.

Deadpool 2 is in UK cinemas from May 15th.

Could Modern Tech Ruin Your Favourite Films?

Ever wondered how Norman Bates would carry out his psychotic rampage if his mother’s motel had been reviewed on TripAdvisor? Although it may have helped spare poor Marion Crane, Alfred Hitchcock’s 1960 classic would have been decidedly duller.

Now, film fans can see how all the best films of the last century would have been altered irretrievably with 21st century technology. A new tool from SunLife shows how modern technology ruined classic movies of yesteryear, with often hilarious consequences. For example, musical fantasy film The Wizard of Oz was nominated for 6 Academy Awards and is often on lists of films to see before you die, but SunLife point out that the 1939 classic would have been considerably shorter if Dorothy and her travel companions had access to Google Maps.

Other old films that would be ruined by new technology include Shawshank Redemption and Casablanca, and although modern technology may destroy these cinematic masterpieces, it probably would help the characters themselves. Rose and Jack’s budding but ultimately tragically short romance may well have gone from strength to strength if the Titanic had a decent radar system!

It makes you think, what other famous movies would have been completely ruined by technology? The invention of camera phones would surely have hampered Gregory Peck and Audrey Hepburn’s anonymity in Roman Holiday and Cary Grant’s unfortunate case of mistaken identity in North by Northwest could be solved by taking a look at his social media accounts.

Although imagining how modern technology would alter classic films is fascinating, what about contemporary movies? Cinematic scenarios that would have been feasible a few years ago have become outdated now everybody has access to a phone, camera, computer and GPS map all on one device. Hollywood directors must be faced with an interesting predicament, do they ignore this huge part of modern life to maintain the drama of a film, or do they try and use technology to create new plot-lines? The latter has been seen in modern films such as Unfriended, a social media-based horror where a group of teenagers are stalked online by the ghost of their deceased friend, or 2017’s The Circle, a film starring Emma Watson and Tom Hanks where a tech giant turns sinister when it starts exploiting user’s privacy. Who could imagine such a thing?

They’re Back and It’s About Time – The Return of the Target Books

rose

If you roll back and mix the decades to the 1970s, Doctor Who fans had no streaming, no Blu-ray, DVD, VHS, Betamax; these were all things of the future with which to relive old episodes of Doctor Who, to watch again and again. If you had a tape recorder there was always the audio recordings; remember sitting with a microphone right up against the TV speaker, all family members told to be quiet for those 25 minutes on Saturdays? This was soon to change when in 1973, the newly formed Target book imprint republished three Doctor Who novels that had been originally released in the 1960s. They sold and sold well; so well in fact that Tandem, the publishing company, wanted their Target imprint to produce more – and more they did produce. From 1974 through to the early 1990s another 153 novels were published. Sales were in the millions. However, all good things come to an end and eventually all the TV stories that contractually could be novelised had been. Time moves on, and Doctor Who fans moved on – to the aforementioned Betamax, VHS, you know the story.

Target books became, for a while, a fond memory and a series of items to be found in charity shops and propping up car boot sales countrywide. When in 2005 Doctor Who in a new incarnation literally exploded back on to the TV screens, DVDs followed – but as for books of the televised stories? No, not a chance it seemed; no Dalek, no Silence in the Library, no The Girl in the Fireplace and no prose resolution as to whether The End of Time really was The Parting of the Ways; none were In preparation.

davies and moffat

The return of Doctor Who to our TV screens has created a hitherto unspoken nostalgia for times past and the glory days of those wonderful pocket-sized books, often published monthly, a fix that was difficult to contain. It’s not impossible when attending a convention or comic con, to spy a fellow Doctor Who fan of a certain age, amble up and say the word “Kklak!” or “A wheezing, groaning sound”; the instant looks of recognition between pleasant open-faced new friends is a deep mutual understanding of the word novelisation and what can be achieved in 128 pages.

Doctor Who book fans were universally surprised and delighted when it was announced that in April 2018 five new Target books were to be published – and that two would be written by ex-showrunners and original scriptwriters Russell T Davies and Steven Moffat, Rose and The Day of the Doctor respectively, helped along by Jenny T Colgan novelising The Christmas Invasion and Paul Cornell the most recent episode Twice Upon a Time, plus James Goss reworking his 2015 novel of City of Death into a novelisation that fits effortlessly into all things Target.

For Target book enthusiasts, having two of the original scriptwriters tackling their own works can only be good news and in a recent Q&A session conducted on behalf of BBC books, both Russell T Davies and Steven Moffat eloquently spoke about the joys of Target Books in those wild and crazy penny chew days of the 1970s.

I loved them!” enthuses Russell. “I’ve still got them all on a shelf here in my office! They were the only official records of an adventure. And they were so mysterious detailing stories we thought we would never see again. I can probably tell you where I was, which shop I was in when I bought it, for every single one of my Target novels.”

Steven agrees. “Every time I’d go to a bookshop – and I was a keen reader – I’d head straight to the Doctor Who book section. Because I’d stared at all the book covers I already owned with such intensity, they were carved into my brain like wounds – so I could tell from right across the shop, by the tiniest variation in colour or artwork, if there was a new one on the shelf, and if there was my heart would leap. Going back a bit I longed for there to be Doctor Who books! One year I was on holiday in Cornwall, in a little town called Mevagissey, and in a shop called Dunns there was a solitary rack of books which I’d always walk round and round, looking for something to read – then one day my Dad grabbed my arm and pointed to the bottom row of paperbacks. Doctor Who and the Daleks, Doctor Who and the Zarbi and Doctor Who and the Crusaders. I was so happy!

jenny colgan

paul cornellPaul Cornell, Jenny T Colgan and James Goss also reminisce about all things Target.

The Target range was tremendously important to me,” explains Paul. “My local Librarian would hold the hardbacks for me without asking. I’d take my Book Tokens; my most precious presents every Christmas and birthday and cash them in on the newest paperback. I’d also use the form in the back of the books to send off for others. Actually the Target Brand also had other books that sounded exciting like Tim Dinsdale’s Story of the Loch Ness Monster and I read all of Agaton Sax. Target and especially Doctor Who got me into reading, everything else I did comes from that.

Jenny picks up the tale. “I don’t remember the first Target book I read, I do remember my favourite, which is State of Decay, I borrowed it from the library again and again. They were the only access to Doctor Who I had. It’s almost impossible to explain that to my kids and to overstate their importance to me.

James Goss

James Goss continues the positive theme. “We live in a world where all the books and video you need is on your phone but there is still something magnificent about the Target novels, they can fit in a jacket pocket, they can go anywhere … they’re so much bigger on the inside. My first book was The Visitation, found at a seaside postcard shop on a hurdy-gurdy along with views of Porlock Weir. Read it a dozen times, amazed that such a thing existed. I went back two days later and discovered The Monster of Peladon which I read a dozen times or more. When I discovered there were others, even more titles than the Narnia series, they became vitally important. The local bookshop had a permanent order on the new books for me; I went in all the time to check if new titles were in. In those days,” remembers James, “you had no real idea what the cover was, maybe a blurry black and white picture in Doctor Who Magazine. So, each cover would be a surprising riot of madness, a juggling harlequin on Black Orchid, a giant crab on The Macra Terror, those Cybermen marching through those stars in The Wheel in Space, they do that a lot the Cybermen, often on some of the covers stopping mid-space walk, to point out an object of interest to each other!

From Targets past to Targets present, when the initial idea was mooted and the world novelisation was uttered, surely no one thought about saying no?

Steven remembers, “I knew nothing of the plans as this all started around the time I was preparing to leave as showrunner. The biggest surprise was that I actually wanted to novelise The Day of the Doctor. I had a hell of a time on that script, I had no idea I wanted to revisit it!

I was very excited!” continues Russell. “I wanted to test myself. I was interested to find out what the process would be like and to look back on a piece of work after a gap of thirteen years was fascinating.”

It was too lovely an offer to say no to,” says Paul, “and Steven asked me specifically if I would novelise Twice Upon A Time.” Jenny elaborates further, “I had one of those ‘I don’t know how busy you are at the moment’ emails from BBC Books which is always exciting and when I found out what it was I was just delighted, the easiest Yes ever.  I was specifically asked to do The Christmas Invasion which I totally adore.” James Goss has a slightly different take on it; “I’d already written mine so I thought ‘Ha! Money for old rope, I’ll be done by teatime…’.”

DOCTOR WHO: TWICE UPON A TIME Christmas Invasion

Both Russell and Steven had their own scripts to work from and the novelisations were born.

It was tricky,” Russell begins. “I wanted to capture the essence of the TV episode but I didn’t want to repeat it, anyway I’d long since lost the scripts! I found a transcript online, and someone found me a copy of the very first draft. I didn’t always look at them. I was a bit more freefalling, or rather, I wanted to add stuff to most of the dialogue because I knew fans would know a lot of it off by heart already, so there had to be new things to discover. A novelisation means new stuff, sheer newness, new action, new dialogue and new insights. A fan these days might have seen Rose a dozen times so I felt honour bound to add things that could only be found inside the pages of the book. And I know what fandom feels like, there’s nothing we love more than discovering something new about something old!

I just sort of started,” says Steven. “I had a few ideas of how it might translate, but really, as with any writing, I just sort of dived in. I found the shooting script on the hard drive, and was shocked to see how much I’d altered it during filming. Quite often, I’d have to watch the DVD and transcribe useful bits of dialogue, because I found I had no written record of really quite important scenes. Then of course, you find parts that don’t quite work in prose. The shock of seeing David and Matt together, John Hurt as the Doctor, surprise appearances by Tom Baker and Peter Capaldi, you have to find a way to make those moments work in a book, without surprise guest stars, which is a challenge.”

Jenny T. Colgan continues. “With The Christmas Invasion, I worked from an early draft script, the shooting script and the transcript, taking what I liked from each of them and adding my own scenes and takes on things. I found it much easier than writing an original novel, it’s writing with all the hard work taken out as Russell had already done the plotting, storyline and monsters! I got to play with the relationships between the characters. It was absolutely a joy.

Paul concurs. “I worked from the original script which had about half an hour more of material than ended up on TV though no more The Tenth Planet material. In the book there are quite a few more character scenes, and there’s even a poem by Steven!” As for the differences between original novel and novelisation, “In some ways it’s easier because you have material in front of you to work with, in some ways it’s harder because there’s a responsibility to the original writer and to the TV version.”

And James and his teatime deadline? “Several weeks later and by then the tea was stone cold, I discovered cutting it down and reformatting it was really difficult. I re-read a few Target novels and realised just how good a job Terrance Dicks, Malcolm Hulke and everyone did in being so vivid and brief. I made sure I followed the unities, twelve chapters, and three chapters per episode. I went through a stack of Target books and grabbed chapter titles from them.” James elaborates on the eventual Target novelisation of City of Death.  “I did toy with writing it from Count Scarlioni’s point of view but it just didn’t work well enough. A shame really, as he’s spent thousands of years planning very carefully and then a lunatic in a scarf turns up, steals his best ideas, the Mona Lisa and his wife, while a schoolgirl builds him a much better time machine in the cellar. It’s all so unfair. Scarlioni really put the hours in. However,” James concludes, “with a novelisation when all the hard work has already been done for you by Douglas Adams, everything else is really very easy and when I originally wrote the book I worked from a slightly longer rehearsal script that proves that a lot of the brilliant, mad beauty of the story really is there on the page, but the polish to the witty dialogue came in the studio. The rehearsal script proves that the thing really was written in a weekend, its all about how the Mona Lisa is a canvas. Between then and recording, someone has gone off and checked an art book and realised the Mona Lisa is painted on wood!

The five novelisations are now published and on the shelves of bookshops up and down the land. As for the future?

That’s me done, I am now a Target author,” Paul Cornell is adamant. “I don’t need to be one again. I’d like to see someone else tackle Father’s Day or the novelisation of the adaptation of Human Nature.

Oh, God, I want us to do them all!” exclaims Jenny. “I have set out my stall. I would love to do Silence in the Library. It is my favourite of Nu Who and I love writing River so much. Russell should do The Stolen Earth, Steven The Eleventh Hour, Paul The Family of Blood (again!) and they should get Richard Curtis to do Vincent and the Doctor and sell it for Comic Relief. You can see I’ve done my research!

James? The Pirate Planet? “I had no trouble with The Pirate Planet novel coming in at 90,000 words as there was so much new material in Douglas Adam’s first draft. Getting that down to 30,000 would be a real challenge, but, I suppose, you could do something that much more resembled what you got on screen. That might be great fun.

I really loved writing Rose,” concludes Russell. “It was the first episode that aired back in 2005; I think it’s more important to consider something new now.”

day doctor book

Hugely enjoyed writing the book,” Steven sums up. “So, yes, I hope to get another go at prose in whatever form.

The Target range of Doctor Who books continue. The novelisations like the TV show are now into their fifth decade and somewhere the grand master of the 128-page story, Terrance Dicks will be watching Buddha-like over the latest additions.

If he doesn’t have them already, it’s a national scandal!” laughs Jenny. Paul agrees. “I hope he’ll be getting sent them by BBC Books! But if he doesn’t I’ll make sure!

As for the contribution Terrance Dicks made, the final word goes to Steven. “Back then, Terrance Dicks would give us perfect, prose replicas of the originals scene by scene, line for line, brilliantly done.”

Absolutely celebrate the old but Target the new. Fantastic!

City of Death, Rose, The Christmas Invasion, The Day of the Doctor and Twice Upon A Time are published by BBC Books at £6.99.

With thanks to James Goss, Jenny T. Colgan and Paul Cornell for taking the time to answer our questions.
The quotes from Russell T. Davies and Steven Moffat are taken from a Q&A that was conducted to accompany the press release of the novelisations on April 7th and are reproduced with kind permission of BBC Books.
With special thanks to Sarah Garnham and Tess Henderson at Penguin Random House.

Johannes Roberts | THE STRANGERS: PREY AT NIGHT

The Strangers: Prey at Night Johannes Roberts

Over the past decade or so, Johannes Roberts has quietly been making quite the name for himself in the horror genre. With the likes of F and Storage 24 under his belt, the past two years has seen Roberts continue to impress with The Other Side of the Door and 47 Meters Down. And now, Roberts is the man tasked with directing The Strangers: Prey at Night – the hotly anticipated follow-up to Bryan Bertino’s 2008 horror favourite, The Strangers. We sat down with this fascinating fella to discuss Prey at Night, putting his own stamp on the sequel, his love of John Carpenter and Stephen King, what to expect from his upcoming 48 Meters Down, and a whole, whole lot more.

STARBURST: Give that the original film has such a strong following, was there any trepidation of tackling a sequel that has been anticipated for a decade now?

Johannes Roberts: Yeah, for sure. There was already a pre-built weariness inside of me waiting for the “it’s not as good as the first movie”. As if I don’t have enough to worry about with bad reviews, there’s now an extra layer that I have to deal with [laughs]. I was particularly worried because nobody quite knew what we were doing. Ten years is a long time in the landscape of cinema, especially horror. Obviously The Purge had come, You’re Next, a lot of these movies had come and taken what was fresh about The Strangers. There was a whole new audience who had never even seen the first movie, so I was like, “Are we rebooting it? Are we remaking it? What the hell are we actually doing with this project?” So there was this huge trepidation there. I think you can see with the movie it kind of evolved through the making of the film. I really sort of felt my way through that film. I loved the first movie, and this fit very well within that universe. It sort of works as a sequel, but then you can see that as the movie progresses it become its own beast that’s kind of crazy, fun, and much more my sensibilities; burning cars, Jim Steinman music. So yes, I was very nervous is the very long answer to your question.

How did you go about trying to put your own stamp on the movie?

It was one of those movies where I got to do stuff that I’d never done before. That was also because I hadn’t written it, I think. So you’re slightly divorced, you have this slight distance to the material that I wouldn’t have had with, say, The Other Side of the Door. I got to do stuff that I’ve wanted to do since I got in the industry. So the zoom lens is out of the box, and I got to direct the movie like I was doing a John Carpenter movie or a Brian De Palma one. It was great fun. Some of that stuff I was terrified of when we were doing it. These kind of shots, nobody’s done in forty years and for good reason. It was kind of like, “Well fuck it, let’s try it.”

The Strangers: Prey at Night

There’s clearly a lot of influences on display here, particularly John Carpenter and Christine, but was there anything maybe a little less obvious that you went back and watched beforehand to inspire you?

You know what, when I took the movie on I was like, “I wanna make Christine!” To be honest, it was as simple as that. I keep going in to Sony to ask them to let me do Christine. Nobody’s letting me do it. So I got the script and just thought it was perfect. I love that truck so much, and it just became a character throughout the movie. The more I filmed it, the more I just fell in love with it. The movies that I had on my desk in Kentucky during prep, I had Christine, I had Duel, I had The Car – which I’d never seen before and is a terrible movie – and then I had a lot of movies with crazy zooms in; so I had The Images, which was a Robert Altman movie I’d never seen before; I had Don’t Look Now; I think I had The Graduate because that had some great camera work. I had plenty of movies that were not the references you would necessarily jump to. The slasher side of it was inbuilt in me, that was already there. Duel was a massive influence. That movie’s great, I’ve not seen it in ages, and the fucking photography on that is insane! Those were the kind of things I looked at. So it was really retro, and I tried to really embrace it.

Like Liv Tyler and Scott Speedman’s characters in the first film, here we have a core group who had their problems long before the killers turn up. As the film opens, the family at the centre of this have their own issues and chips on their shoulders. Was there ever a concern that these characters might come off as unlikeable rather than sympathetic?

Oh god, yes. The script trod a fine, fine balance, to say the least. Yeah, I was very worried because you could hate every single one of them. I think we worked it as much as we could to make sure that didn’t happen, but really that’s the magic of casting. It was just a great cast. You end up caring about them – Bailee [Madison], Lewis [Pullman], Christine [Hendricks], and Martin [Henderson]. But that was a big worry for me.

The Strangers: Prey at Night

As the film plays out, there’s one of the great horror set pieces we’ve seen in many a year as Total Eclipse of the Heart blasts out over a neon-lit swimming pool. Was that sequence a particular challenge to put together?

If I had to tell you the hardest thing to shoot in that movie, I would say it was that fucking scene where the four of them were in the car and they were chatting, driving along.

The opening scene?

Yeah. It’s the first time I’ve ever down a low-loader, which is putting the car basically on a trailer and driving along. I’d never done one before, and people told me to do a green screen. And I thought that was terrible, I just wanted to do the low-loader thing. But fucking hell, man, I’m never doing that again! You’ve got police cars guiding you through traffic, technically you’re not in the car, you’re in a van in the front, there’s no way to communicate. It was just a fucking nightmare. It was on our second day of filming, and I was thinking that the actors were going to just hate me throughout this film. That was a fucking nightmare, whereas the pool sequence was a weird one. It was shot nowhere near where the whole trailer park was. It was shot in a totally different place. There was a pool sequence written in the script, but it was like a kind of motel pool, like you’d see in some Americana show. I can’t remember what the area was called, but it was in a higher tax break because it’s a slightly depressed area. I was introduced to this place, which is where we shot the playground as well, and I saw this swimming pool which was three times bigger than an Olympic pool. I just thought, “What the fuck am I going to do with this?!” It was insane but it just kind of came together.

Dealing with water, I’d done a whole movie – 47 Meters Down – so I wasn’t particularly freaked out by that. It took us ages to get all of the equipment there. We didn’t have a lot of money on this movie at all – that’s an understatement – so we didn’t have many toys to play with. There’s this beautiful shot in that sequence, where the camera goes up and over the Man in the Mask. We didn’t have the technical equipment to do that, so the Grip was actually sort of bolting stuff together to make that. On The Other Side of the Door, I had all of these technical things. Here, we had nothing, we were just making stuff up. While all of this was happening, I just went around with the doubles and cut the scene together on an iPhone, and then we went out and filmed it for real. It just kind of worked. I mean, that zoom shot in it is my favourite shot that I’ve ever done – where Pin-Up Girl runs out. That was my tribute to Exorcist III, which is one of my favourite movies. That was another movie that was on my desk, and that’s always a big influence on whatever I do. It’s a beautiful, beautiful movie, and I’d argue it has one of the best shot sequences in horror cinema – down the corridor when the guy goes to the nurse. And I wanted that sort of thing for this, for the zoom lens to create this dreamy horror sequence. It’s very subliminal. There’s something about it that really gets you, that you don’t quite know if it’s dream-orientated. But it just kind of worked. It was a weird one.

We were shooting at the other side of the swimming pool, shooting down and across. If you look across at the other angle though, there’s actually a river there. Literally, as soon as we turned the lights on we had the entire fucking insect life of Kentucky! It’s one of those things that you could never have thought about ahead of time, so I had to have ten, twenty people in between takes rushing around. By and large you can’t see them, but there are definitely some of the wider shots where water is absolutely bubbling because there’s so many creatures there. They were huge and just sort of landed in the pool! But you know what, it was not a hard sequence to film. I think probably for the DP and those on the technical side it was tricky to put together, but the low-loader sequence was way tougher.

47 Meters Down

In recent years, it’s been a refreshing change to see some quality, serious shark movies out there. One such film is your 47 Meters Down, which has already been confirmed for a sequel. What can you tell us about 48 Meters Down apart from there’s an extra meter?

48 Meters Down is basically The Descent under water. So it’s a group of girls in Mexico and they are exploring an underwater iron city. The tunnels collapse and they’re trapped inside the city, and the sharks have come into the city. It’s going to make you feel pretty queasy. I learnt to cage dive when I was doing 47 Meters Down, and it’s the most terrifying thing in the world. I thought, “Yeah, if we ever go back to do a sequel then we’re doing this.” That kicks off reasonably soon.

You’ve mentioned Christine already, but are there any other dream properties you’d like to get your hands on?

I’d just love to do a Stephen King movie of some ilk. I keep circling around stuff, and I have the rights for Hearts in Atlantis, which we’re going back and forth on. It’s not horror, and I’m the horror guy, and he’s the horror guy, so people are asking where’s the clowns. And every month I seem to have dinner with Jeremy Bolt, who’s the producer of the Resident Evil films and Event Horizon movies. I always ask how can we make Event Horizon again, because I’d love to do a movie like that. It’s such a cool movie.

In your career to date, your films tend to have a lot more depth to them than simply being horror for the sake of horror, and it comes across that you really care about these pictures and the genre. Do you think that is something that’s particularly helped endear you to horror fans out there?

Truthfully, I don’t know. I definitely love the genre, and I wake up in the morning and either want to be John Carpenter or I want to be Stephen King, depending on which day it is. And that’s the kind of thing that keeps you going when you get battered on a movie or a movie does badly or things aren’t going your way. If you remember why you got in to this, you’re a nerd, you love the movies you love. I would hope that that comes across. You always get people that just attack stuff for whatever reason. Like The Other Side of the Door just because it had the Fox logo at the beginning. Some of the reviews for that labelled it a soulless studio thing. With The Strangers: Prey at Night, this is a cash-grab. And that always gets me a little bit because you don’t have to like the movie, that’s fine, but it’s never soulless. It’s done with just real, real love, and that always annoys me when I see that. I just hope this movie connects with the fans in the way that I would’ve connected with it if I’d watched it. Chatting to you, I think we have the same film references.

The Strangers: Prey at Night

To close things out, would you be up for doing another Strangers movie if there happened to be a third entry in the series?

You know what, they’re talking about it. I certainly would want to be involved. My sensibilities are that I’d love to guide the franchise. The first movie is very bleak, and my sensibilities aren’t so bleak. The first movie takes Texas Chain Saw as its sort of god, whereas mine takes John Carpenter. And within Carpenter you have movies like Big Trouble in Little China, so there’s a slightly lighter feel. I’d love the franchise to explore more those sorts of things. But we’ll see what happens. It’s done pretty well here in the States, so let’s see how it does in England and see if it happens.

The Strangers: Prey at Night hits UK cinemas on May 4th.

Latest Issue 448 – Out Now

448 NS

STARBURST celebrates the anti-hero with previews of both SOLO: A STAR WARS STORY – the early years of everyone’s favourite scruffy-looking nerf herder – and DEADPOOL 2, which sees the Merc with a Mouth return to his foul-mouthed and bombastic best. To complement that, we also look at other loveable rogues of cinema.

We also look forward to the animated THE LITTLE VAMPIRE 3D, and interview former DOCTOR WHO PAUL MCCANN and the designer of the upcoming HELLBOY table top game from MANTIC GAMES.

There are also celebrations in order as we look back at 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY as it turns fifty and the fortieth anniversaries of seminal TV series BLAKE’S 7.

In our regular features, we take a look at TOBE HOOPER’s THE FUNHOUSE, heading to HORROR CHANNEL, and Independents Day talks to the man behind some of the most intriguing UFO documentaries.

Plus all your favourite COLUMNS, NEWS, REVIEWS and much MORE from the worlds of SCI-FI, HORROR and FANTASY!