Sabtu, 01 Oktober 2016

How 'Miss Peregrine' screenwriter Jane Goldman turned her quirks into a golden Hollywood career - Los Angeles Times

Perhaps it was the time her father brought a VHS tape of David Lynch's surrealist cult film "Eraserhead" to watch at her 10th birthday party. Or maybe it was when she accosted a magazine editor as a teen, trying to get a job – and succeeded, opting to become a reporter instead of going to college. As a young person, Jane Goldman always knew she was a little bit different.

"I've always been drawn to spooky things, to the unusual, to things that are dark but in a friendly way," Goldman said.

That eccentricity proved an asset on the English screenwriter's latest project, an adaptation of Ransom Riggs' bestselling 2011 young adult novel, "Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children," directed by the official auteur of outsiders and weirdos, Tim Burton[1].

"She's definitely a peculiar person," Burton said of Goldman, bestowing what counts as the highest of compliments from the director of "Beetlejuice," "Ed Wood" and "Alice in Wonderland." "She's very intelligent, very creative, very outgoing but very internal as well." 

"Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children," which opens Friday, stars Asa Butterfield[2] as Jake, a contemporary Florida boy investigating his grandfather's World War II connection to an orphanage full of children with mysterious powers. Eva Green is Miss Peregrine, the loving headmistress to the motley brood, which includes a girl who can float on air, a boy with a beehive in his stomach and a girl with an extra mouth in the back of her head. Samuel L. Jackson is a terrifying undead creature who hunts "peculiars," as they're called, with a penchant for eating human eyeballs.

"I probably feel more of a responsibility to make sure female characters are dimensional," Goldman said.

Goldman's upcoming projects include "Kingsman: The Golden Circle," a sequel to Vaughn's successful spy film, due next June from 20th Century Fox, and a take on the Daphne du Maurier novel "Rebecca," memorably adapted by Alfred Hitchcock in 1940. Though daunted by the legacy of the Hitchcock version, Goldman said she was interested to read that the powerful English director was prevented from making the film he wanted to make due to the censorship of the Motion Picture Production Code. 

"I adored the novel's moral ambiguity," Goldman said. "That it makes you question why you're rooting for the characters you're rooting for. Hitch wanted to do things he wasn't allowed to do because of the Hays code, which said people needed to be punished for bad things they did. I think if he could have taken another crack at it, he would have."

See the most-read stories in Entertainment this hour »[4]

rebecca.keegan@latimes.com[5]

Follow me on Twitter for more movie news: @thatrebecca[6]

ALSO:

Review: The Tim Burton magic is back with 'Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children'[7]

'Miss Peregrine' expected to top 'Deepwater Horizon' and 'Magnificent Seven' at the box office[8]

Critics disagree if Tim Burton's 'Peregrine' is a return to form or another overstuffed YA adaptatio n[9]

Commentary: With 'Miss Peregrine,' Tim Burton is just the latest director to shirk a responsibility to diversity[10]

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