New Houdini movie rumoured to feature Lovecraft and his monsters

Sony is apparently reviving their on-again-off-again Houdini movie with new writer Max Landis. Originally a straight biopic, the Houdini script was then pepped up with the Downton Abbey-friendly twist of “…and Houdini falls for a glamourous woman spiritualist”. I guess the nascent idea was to move it toward being an American riff on the Sherlock Holmes reboot movies, while also appealing to the fans of British TV costume drama.

This week there’s news of a new Max Landis script, set to have more of a horror/mystery tone… “telling the story with an H.P. Lovecraft influence” (Deadline). Which holds out the tantalising possiblity of us seeing a 30-foot high Lovecraft glowering down from the silver screen.

But movies that won’t appeal much to the Korean / Chinese / world market are hard to sell to studio bosses. Digging up dusty old American hero-brands from the pre-1939 era may also feel rather risky after the recent studio-threatening failures of The Lone Ranger and John Carter of Mars. So I’d have to suspect that Houdini might not be a $200m tentpole movie. However… if Sony is really going ahead with a major Doc Savage movie soon, then it would make financial sense for them to hedge their bets and re-use Doc‘s expensive 1920s costumes and props in a smaller Houdini movie.

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So what might it look like? I’d guess at a stylised period look (think the first 30 minutes of Sky Captain), coupled with a romping Indiana Jones-like mystery/archeology story. Houdini, Lovecraft, and Lovecraft’s bespectacled boy-archeologist protege Bobby Barlow (who is Not What He Seems), all racing through dark versions of National Treasure puzzles to uncover a Mysterious Forgotten Tomb or similar. Also on the trail of the mystery is the sinister Madame Blavatski — who is also Not What She Seems, pretty nifty with the ol’ psychic powers, and who turns out to be the concealed love interest of Houdini. A fairly conventional adventure, perhaps (hey, it’s 6.30am and I’m writing this before breakfast…), with superhero-like Theosophist powers vs. Lovecraftian monsters to liven up the escapology. If Sony’s Houdini movie is indeed intended as a safe backstop for the finances of a big Doc Savage tentpole, I guess conventional may be what’s required. Both the monsters and psychic powers could be pretty much invisible or shadowy, to save on SFX costs, although extensive dream/flashback sequences could bring scale and visual drama to some of Houdini’s escapology stagings. Here’s also hoping for a lovely $50,000 shot of Lovecraft slowly realising… “what, my monsters are actually… real!?”

Sparrows, restored version

The Library of Congress restored version of the gothic southern swamps movie Sparrows is now available on DVD. The movie starred the biggest star of her day, Mary Pickford, and consequently saw a very wide release in May 1926. The expressionist-style horror / dark melodrama is set in a decrepit ‘baby farm’ in the swamps of New Orleans. Lovecraft was, by that date, no longer in New York. But one wonders if he saw the movie in Providence in summer 1926? Lovecraft of course wrote “The Call of Cthulhu” in the summer of 1926, so one has to wonder if the movie’s acclaimed visuals could have influenced the feel or perhaps even the setting of his story’s New Orleans swamp scenes?

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More Open Lovecraft

* Laurel Jean (2013), Cosmic revulsion: representations of the Longinian sublime in the works of H.P. Lovecraft (Masters dissertation, Humboldt State University)

* Leonam Baesso da Silva Liziero (2013), “O Estado-Cthulhu e a emergencia do terror totalitario na teoria do Direito e do Estado no Seculo XX”, Revista Juridica, Vol 3, No. 32, 2013. (In Spanish. On Lovecraft as a prescient foreteller of the rise of… “the decline of the value of human life in the totalitarian State” in the 20th century)

* Sid Sondergard (early 2000s?), “Elder Gods, Mutants, and Sorcerers: the Lovecraft semiotic as sociocultural critique in horror comix”

World Fantasy Convention panels on Lovecraft

Courtesy of yog-sothoth.com, two recordings of panels from the World Fantasy Convention 2013, Brighton, UK. Sign-ins to the site are required…

* When did H.P. Lovecraft become a franchise? With Steve Saffel (moderator) + Martin Andersson, Ramsey Campbell, S.T. Joshi, Darrell Schweitzer, and Charles Stross.

* Arthur Machen, H.P. Lovecraft and the development of the weird tale. With S.T. Joshi (moderator) + Nina Allan, Simon Bestwick, Jesus Canadas, John Llewellyn Probert, and Darrell Schweitzer.

Studi Lovecraftiani

A new edition of the Italian language scholarly journal Studi Lovecraftiani is out.

BookCoverPreview SL 13

My translation of the contents list:

* Thematic and diachronic analysis : The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath and At the Mountains of Madness

* From the imaginary architecture of otherness: the perception of the world in the work of H.P. Lovecraft

* Lovecraft and the dinosaur egg [must refer to that controversy he stirred over the theme of a published story]

* Plants of Dr. Cinderella : parallels between Gustav Meyrink and H.P. Lovecraft

* Lovecraft and Physics

* Carcosa

* Dark castles, crypts and monsters : Lovecraft in Quake [the popular videogame]

* The Key and the Abyss : a Jungian reading of the works of Howard Phillips Lovecraft

“The Well of the Ancients” by H.P. Lovecraft [?]

* “Gaze fixedly into the red eye of your god!” Or, the reluctant messiah of Rivermouth : a commentary on the film Cthulhu

* Review

* The Library of the Lovecraftian scholar : notifications for a critical bibliography

* Notes on books, essays and articles in the press related to HPL, 2010-2013

Of Evill Sorceries done in New-England

New blog post by S.T. Joshi. He notes of his forthcoming Variorum Lovecraft, an edition including all the textual variants in Lovecraft’s fiction, that…

“As an appendix [in Variorum Lovecraft], I will print things like … “Of Evill Sorceries done in New-England, of Daemons of No Humane Shape” — the fragment that August Derleth incorporated (with extensive alterations) into The Lurker at the Threshold (1945). It does not appear as if I or anyone else has ever published this document, in its original form.