Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 5

Sign In

COVID-19 More

Entertainment

No real controversy over scary kids tale Coraline, author


Gaiman says

CBC Arts · Posted: Feb 05, 2009 5:04 PM ET | Last Updated: February 5, 2009

For his children's tale Coraline, a film version of which hits theatres Friday, Gaiman said he made his
heroine 'a smart little girl who is going to be scared and who is going to keep doing the right thing, and
that's what [being] brave is.' ((Focus Features Films))

Having just won the prestigious Newbery Medal and with the new film based on his
bestseller Coraline hitting theatres Friday, acclaimed author, graphic novel creator and
screenwriter Neil Gaiman says he's searching for a bit of controversy, but can't seem to find
it.
After hearing about protests regarding the content and age appropriateness of his dark and
creepy children's and young adult titles, the British writer began looking for the critics
online.
"So far it hasn't been a hullabaloo. There's part of me — there's an awful, evil part of me —
that hopes it does escalate to a hullabaloo…. As far as I can tell, it consists of one grumpy
lady on the New York Times website," Gaiman quipped in an interview with CBC Radio's Q
this week.

"I keep hearing that there's a huge fuss and controversy and hullabaloo and I keep looking
for it… I love controversy and wouldn't mind some. But I don't see it."

The celebrated writer, whose credits span the landmark Sandman comic series, novels like
American Gods and films such as Beowolf, has been travelling non-stop of late to promote
filmmaker Henry Selick's new movie adaptation of Coraline, based on his 2002 children's
book.

Kids, adults see scary tale in different light

While he acknowledged that the spine-tingling tale — presented as a 3-D stop-motion film
— might not be suitable for everyone, he said that in general, children view the story quite
differently than adults do.

"Children react to the story fundamentally as an adventure. They may get a little bit scared,
but it's an 'edge-of-your-seat, what's-gonna-happen-next, oh scary!' thing, because you're
giving them a story about somebody like themselves," he explained.

"Yes, they're going up against something dark and nasty. But it's like James Bond going up
against a James Bond villain. You never have any doubt that James Bond is going to get
through it."

However, "adults get scared," he said. "Adults get disturbed, and I think one reason for that
is because it's a story about a child in danger and I think we're hardwired to worry about
children in danger."

Young daughter's stories inspired dark story

Though the story itself was written by the 48-year-old author, informed by elements from
his own childhood, he noted that it was actually inspired by the types of tales concocted by
his daughter Holly when she was still in kindergarten.
Neil Gaiman says he hasn't found any serious hullabaloo over his work, though part of him would like to.
((Philippe Matas/HarperCollins/Associated Press))
"She would make me write down her stories, which were always about little girls being
kidnapped by evil women, witches normally, who would disguise themselves as her mother.
They were the kind of stories that would have given Edward Gorey nightmares," Gaiman
said.
"They were wonderful. I initially thought I should go and find some of these things and read
them to her because she'd like it. Then I realized there wasn't anything like that on the
shelves. So I started to write one."

It was years before he had time to finish the novel and, by then, it was his younger daughter
Maddy who had reached the age to enjoy the eerie fairy tale.

In bringing these stories to life, frightening scenes and chilling villains are not the goal,
Gaiman said.

"What is important is to tell [children] that a bad thing can be beaten.... When I went into
Coraline, that was what I held onto," he explained.

In writing the tale, he vowed not to make his young heroine extraordinary. Rather, "she's
going to be a smart little girl who is going to be scared and who is going to keep doing the
right thing, and that's what [being] brave is," Gaiman said.

"Tell kids that dangerous things can be overcome. Tell them that you can go out and dream.
Tell them that you can go out and change the world."

POPULAR NOW IN NEWS

U.S. groups tell Biden to drop the dairy duel with Canada
1
478 reading now

Quarantine extended up to 24 days for contacts of COVID-19 variant cases, top doc says
2
463 reading now

Amazon's Jeff Bezos stepping down nearly 30 years after founding company
3
351 reading now

CBC EXPLAINS
4
How the Novavax COVID-19 vaccine differs from those already approved in Canada
269 reading now

Family hires former Toronto police inspector for ongoing probe into billionaire couple's deaths
5
y p p g gp p
5
259 reading now

©2021 CBC/Radio-Canada. All rights reserved.

Visitez Radio-Canada.ca

You might also like