Monday, December 17, 2007

Yoo Hoo Mr. DeMille!

Every now and again, someone who loves me asks if there's any word on a possible movie version of Life As We Knew It.

Patiently, I reply to Someone that no, there isn't, and I assume there never will be.

Why's that? Someone says.


(You know, it's amazing what difference a few letters can make. Someone Says would be much harder to play than Simon Says. But I digress. Big time).

(Where was I?)

Oh yeah. Someone was asking why they'll never make a movie out of LAWKI.

Because it would be way too hard to get all those actors and actresses and cat to lose so much weight, I respond politely but firmly. Sure, Tom Hanks did it for a movie once, but he's just an Oscar whore. You'll never see the true luminaries of cinema, the stars of High School Musical Two, cheapen themselves with weight loss.

Someone almost inevitably loses interest in the topic right around then and moves on to far more significant stuff, like whether Tony Romo and Jessica Simpson are really right for each other. And I'm left feeling forlorn because there will never be a LAWKI movie.

However, I didn't get a degree in film from NYU for nothing. That degree cost a lot of money, and it's about time I put it to greater use than simply mentioning that Marty Scorsese was a teaching assistant in a course I took (and got a C in, thank you very much).

Special effects! That's all LAWKI needs for it to become a Major Motion Picture. Forget making all those poor actors gain and lose weight. With the right special effects, the actors can weigh whatever they want, and the audience will never know the difference.

After much work in my secret laboratory, I've created the necessary special effects. Here are sample photographs of Before, During, And Close To The End scenes. Feel free to oooh and ahhh.


There they stand, back row from left to right: Mom, Matt, Miranda, Jonny and Mrs. Nesbitt, front row: Horton The Cat, just the way you pictured them at beginning of LAWKI. Robust, happy, practically multi-dimensional.


Let's look at them further along in the story. They remain, back row, left to right: Mom, Matt, Miranda, Jonny, and Mrs. Nesbitt. Front row: Horton The Cat. See how the actors convey the horrors they've encountered. See how they've already lost some weight.

It's shocking how different they look after only a few months. It's also shocking how much Jonny's left hand resembles a foot. Us special effects wizards are truly amazing.


Now for the piece de resistance. Just try to resistance. You know you won't be able to. But the squeamish amongst you may want to cover your eyes and peek.

In the back row, just where we left them: Mom, Matt, Miranda and Jonny. Front row: Horton The Cat and Mrs. Nesbitt.


While some of the credit must be given to the actors for their heartrending portrayals of grief and near starvation, frankly the special effects artist (i.e. me) should be the one most rewarded with praise, adoration, and an Oscar or two. Or three. There's plenty of room on my fireplace mantel for as many as the Academy Of Motion Picture Arts And Sciences cares to throw my way.

And won't Marty Scorsese be proud!

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Please let me know when the casting call is. I think I have the acting chops to play Horton the Cat. As a matter of fact, I believe it is the role I was born to play.

Years ago I was this close to being Moris the Cat, but... well, let's just say that my morals were a bit higher than a certain nameless tabby.

Glen

Lee said...

I personally think it would make a great mini-series, if not a feature film.

Just hold onto that creative control option! :)

Paige Y. said...

Loved the post! I'd also love the play the role of Horton except he disappears for a large part of the book -- I wouldn't want to be out of the spotlight for that long :)

You could pick some of those actresses that look half-starved anyway. The only challenge would be to get them to eat for the first half of the movie.

Marci said...

Your drawings have improved greatly. The subjects have a substantially greater physical presence. And Mrs. Nesbitt on the floor is a great tragic figure of epic proportions.

I agree, mini-series is a good format for this book. There are movies made to show first run at churches, rather than theaters. Perhaps you can start a new movie genre of first run movies shown to cave dwellers who are awaiting the end of the world. Or schools, which are much the same thing.

Now I will see if I can actually post or if they will ask for my identity and password again.

Marci said...

Oh yay, I did it! Now if I can just read the doggone security letters!

Becky said...

While I would love to see LAWKI be a movie, I think it would make the best video game ever. :)

Anonymous said...

Love the drawings! Maybe you could persuade a bunch of really skinny actresses to take on the roles, gain weight gradually and film the whole shebang backwards? What do you think?
Shula Klinger

Susan Beth Pfeffer said...

Hi Shula-

Do you have any idea how hard it would be to convince skinny actresses to gain weight?

There isn't enough money in the world!