Kim Batchelor

Writer of magical realism and other imaginative fiction

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Mar 16 2018

Madeleine L’Engle and a Wrinkle in Time

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This is not a book review because I have not yet read the book. This is not a movie review because I have not yet seen the movie. In spite of those oversights, for years, I have been fascinated by what I knew of the story of A Wrinkle in Time and the woman who wrote it, so much so that I included mention of it in two of my novels.

At the end of The Island of Lost Children, Wendy reads A Wrinkle in Time to her brothers. In Gem of the Starry Skies, Gwen considers it a favorite book and suggests it to Gabriel, her friend who is also a comic book creator. I was awed by the visually stunning trailers for Ava DuVernay’s film version and excited to hear that one of my favorite directors would be directing this movie version.

Spirit and Science

I was never assigned A Wrinkle in Time in school. I’m not sure why it did not end up on one of my required reading lists. Published in 1962, the book won a Newberry Award and it became writer Madeleine L’Engle’s most famous book. In her work, she merged her Christian faith with science, reconciling the pursuit of knowledge of the universe with the eternal mysteries of the universe. She possessed a generous view of her faith and was criticized by some for her belief that grace extends to all and not just a chosen few.

For an interesting interview with Madeleine L’Engle, go to this New Yorker article.

Advice for Writers

A Wrinkle in Time was considered “junior fiction” when published, and Madeleine L’Engle had advice for authors who write for children/young adults. In a New York Times Book Review interview, L’Engle said that the writer of a good children’s book may need to return to the “intuitive understanding of [his/her] own childhood.” Be childlike but not childish.

I connect most with is how she created stories merging the everyday with the fantastical, what we now call ‘magical realism.’ As anyone who reads my work knows, that style of writing is my favorite. For all these reasons, I look forward to seeing the movie and reading the book as quickly as I can, to see what a fascinating author has done and how a talented and visionary director brought that story to life.

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Written by Kim · Categorized: Magical realism, Movies · Tagged: madeleine l'engle, wrinkle in time

Mar 09 2017

Water from the Moon

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“You do whatever you can about the misery that’s in front of you. Add your light to the sum of light.” Billy Kwan, The Year of Living Dangerously

The flickering illumination of a nearby fire filters through a white cloth. Children’s voices accompany the Gamelan, traditional percussive music from bronze instruments. There, on the island of Java, shadow puppets of the Wayang Kulit act out a scene from Hindu mythology.

Click here to watch.

This is the opening of my favorite movie, The Year of Living Dangerously. The shadow puppets come to represent the characters in the movie that stars Mel Gibson and Sigourney Weaver.

Look at Prince Ajuna. He’s a hero. But he can also be fickle and selfish. Krishna says to him, “All is clouded by desire, Ajuna, as a fire by smoke, as a mirror by dust. Through these, it blinds the soul.

The movie contains many stunning and sometimes powerful images. The camera hovers over a mountainous landscape of rich greens as a vehicle moves through it. A grieving mother pours water over her lifeless young son, nestled in white lilies.

In the movie, photojournalist Billy Kwan—a male played by the female actor Linda Hunt who won a best supporting actress Oscar for the role—moves between two worlds in 1965 Indonesia. One world is that of his profession capturing images of a beautiful land on the verge of tragedy. He spends brief moments in the other world trying to improve the lives of one family living in extreme poverty.

Most of us become children again when we enter the slums of Asia. And last night I watched you walk back into childhood. With all its opposite intensities: laughter and misery, the crazy and the grim, toy town and a city of fear.

For a time, Billy navigates both worlds successfully. He occasionally joins in the camaraderie of his journalistic peers while also providing monetary support to a mother and her very young son. When the child dies in spite of Billy’s efforts, and he can no longer ignore the callous exploitation he sees in his colleagues, Billy is thrown into a conflict he can’t resolve, except with one last, desperate act.

Between 500,000 and 1 million Indonesians were massacred during what was known as “The 1965 Tragedy.” “Water from the moon,” one of the Indonesians in the movie says before he goes into hiding. “Something you can never have.”

I took that phrase, “Water from the Moon,” as the title of my first novel, a story of “what if.” What if we lost our precious democratic institutions? What if the United States ever found itself under dictatorship? The story was inspired by what happened when the longstanding democracy of Chile in 1973 was replaced with dictatorship. The main character of the novel, Adrienne Dylan, struggles with choosing the best way to respond to the increasingly oppressive situation of her home country. She can live an isolated life or put herself at risk working with those who want to change the situation. She can choose to react violently or nonviolently.

Always in the back of Adrienne’s mind is her late father’s possible role in the overthrow of democracy, and in the increasing evidence that he was responsible for the death of her birth mother when Adrienne was a child.

On a recent trip to Guatemala, as a van carried me from Lake Atitlan to the colonial town of Antigua, I wanted to immerse myself in music to drown out the incessant droning of a fellow passenger. I chose to listen to the soundtrack I created for Water from the Moon. Each song evoked a scene, and I soon found myself drawn into the emotional story I had created years ago. I sometimes looked around at the mountains surrounding the Pan American Highway and found it hard to believe that not that long ago, Guatemala found itself in the midst of a civil war that had lasted decades. Recently, it has arrived at a place where shoots of stronger institutions that are crucial for democracy have started to grow.

Here in the United States, we live now in turbulent times, and the upheaval has many of us wondering and worrying about the future. We have limited ability to know what will come. We seek the answer as to the best road to take. It feels sometimes we are looking for a few drops on our parched tongues from some lunar spring thousands of miles away.

Friends are reading 1984 by George Orwell. The Handmaid’s Tale, by Margaret Atwood. The Iron Heel, by Jack London. And It Can’t Happen Here, by Sinclair Lewis and The Man in the High Castle by Philip K. Dick. I often consider removing Water from the Moon from the metaphorical bottom drawer and rewriting it for our time. That consideration has never been stronger than in the last few months. Storytelling has great power–to both take us to those dark places and give us the opportunity to ponder what we can do to pull ourselves back into the light.

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Written by Kim · Categorized: Magical realism, Moon, Movies, Myth, Suspense · Tagged: indonesia, wayang kulit

Jun 06 2016

Alice and the Heroine’s Journey

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Mia Wasikowska is Alice in Alice Through the Looking Glass.

There are few pastimes more satisfying to me than settling into a theater seat and watching a 3D movie. The best 3D movies take me to a place where I’m immersed in a new world, usually a visually stunning one. Riding on the back of a dragon-like creature soaring over a canyon. Walking a path deep in a forest of odd creatures or familiar ones made luminescent. Navigating the streets of a quaint village. Entering a hobbit house. It’s like taking a brief vacation to an unfamiliar land.

Even in these movies, story is just as important as the immersive experience. The young orphaned Hugo living in a train station in Paris and discovering the world through a mentor. The threatened homeland of the Na’vis and how they fight back. The unexpected examination of good and evil of Maleficent. I admit that if I want to enter these mythical worlds, I may be willing to overlook some issues with the storyline but not all.

When I decided last week to see Alice Through the Looking Glass, early reviews had me thinking that I would be more satisfied with the visuals than what the story had to offer. I couldn’t have been more wrong.

Yes, the cinematic world I found myself drawn into was close to the most beautiful I’d ever experienced. A view of a pastry filled table ready for a tea party is replaced by a shimmering world of time and timepieces. A girl with experience captaining her own ships guides a Chronosphere over a churning sea. But more than the visuals is what’s at the heart of this story that has been overlooked over Johnny Depp’s odd Mad Hatter and his personal problems: this story is about a girl who is smart and courageous. Alice opens as the captain of her deceased father’s ship, finding her way out of a dilemma while the males in her crew prefer to surrender to the pirates. She challenges the man who wants to relegate her to a clerk’s position in what was her father’s company. And she enters the worlds with dangers lurking without hesitation.

The Writer’s Journey web site describes the Hero’s Journey as:

“[A] pattern of narrative identified by the American scholar Joseph Campbell that appears in drama, storytelling, myth, religious ritual, and psychological development.  It describes the typical adventure of the archetype known as The Hero, the person who goes out and achieves great deeds on behalf of the group, tribe, or civilization.

In Alice Through the Looking Glass, Alice as heroine fits that pattern with two exceptions: she doesn’t hesitate to heed the call and she doesn’t require a mentor. She reasons out her own trail and learns from her mistakes.

Unfortunately, many will avoid the movie because of reviews that miss this aspect, and others will shun it because of Depp’s character. Interrupt the latter any way you want. This is a movie I want to show to children of either gender to give them an opportunity to decide for themselves.

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Written by Kim · Categorized: Movies, Storytelling · Tagged: Alice Through the Looking Glass, Hero's Journey

Oct 12 2015

Pan, the Movie: Stunning Scenes, Lots of Action, Some Flaws

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Pan MovieNeverland: Where the girls are strong and the boys are awaiting their destinies. These are the main themes of the new movie Pan which debuted this weekend.

The buzz before the movie’s debut focused on the non-American Indian Rooney Mara playing Tiger Lily. In J.M. Barrie’s Peter Pan, the character of Tiger Lily is the chief’s daughter and “princess” of a tribe resembling that of a Native American group, and in the new Pan movie, she’s a prominent member of a diverse tribal group that seems to include African and Caribbean characters. I tend to agree with the concerns that the character wasn’t played by an actor of color because it’s a missed opportunity, and the controversy detracts from the fact that in the new movie, TL is a warrior, skilled in sword play while balancing herself on narrow wooden beams high above the ground and trained by another female character. I’m also ambivalent about the romantic tension between her and James Hook, the man who will eventually become Peter’s nemesis.

Setting aside the controversies, I’d rather focus on what I liked about the movie—the visual power of many of the scenes and the creativity found in the narrative of this Peter Pan origin story. The scene of the ship soaring through space after kidnapping the orphans, including Peter, is stunning, especially when Peter flies through the starry skies tethered only by a rope to the flying pirate ship. When the ship ascends to the island, the images within giant bubbles provide a beautiful visual. And one of the most impressive moments came when a giant crocodile arced over the floating trio of Tiger Lily, Hook and Peter.

In the original work, Peter was found as a baby by fairies who then took him to Never Neverland. Like Peter and the Starcatchers and the Syfy Channel’s Neverland, the movie begins with the assumption that Peter grows up in an orphanage. The orphan boy then searches for the woman who left him as a baby in a basket at the door of the orphanage. The pirate Blackbeard acquires children to labor in his mines through collusion with the nun who heads the orphanage.

The story of Peter Pan has provided fertile ground for reimaging the story in different forms. Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson did it with the Starcatchers series; Jodi Lee Anderson reimagined the characters in her novel Tiger Lily; and two books in a series by Heather Killough-Walden explore the more grown up characters for a young adult audience. Full disclosure: I’ve done the same myself with my modern take, The Island of Lost Children. There is much to recommend this current version, in spite of some of the criticism. If nothing else, it provides another opportunity for fans to fly through vivid scenes that many of us look forward to in our dreams.

Plenty of legroom on these trips without the hassles of carry-ons and baggage fees.

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Written by Kim · Categorized: Movies, Neverland, Peter Pan

Feb 23 2015

Selkies and The Song of the Sea

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Song of the Sea 2“The seas around Orkney and Shetland harbor the shy Selkies or Seal-Faeries (known as the Roane in Ireland). A female Selkie is able to discard her seal skin and come ashore as a beautiful maiden. If a human can capture her skin, the Selkie can be forced to become a fine, if wistful, wife. However, should she ever find her skin she immediately returns to the sea, leaving the husband to pine and die. The males raise storms and upturn boats to avenge the indiscriminate slaughter of the seals.” — Brian Froud and Alan Lee, “Faeries”

The mythical Selkie is a focus of two memorable movies—The Secret of Roan Inish (1994) and the more recent The Song of the Sea, one among the 2015 nominees for the Academy Award for Animation. Both the live action Roan Inish, directed by John Sayles, and Song of the Sea deal with the Selkie as revealed family member—brother in the former and sister and mother in the latter. And both, though intended for children, are equally as captivating for adults.

Song of the Sea 1Song of the Sea was my choice this weekend in anticipation of the Academy Awards. The characters are drawn simply but they are placed in landscapes both unusual and beautifully rendered—villages, a winding road up to a cottage and lighthouse, the outline in white of creatures and objects superimposed over richly colored seascapes.

The strength of the movie is in its portrayal of family—the disappearance of a parent, displacement for the “good of the children,” the older brother struggling with his relationship with his mute and annoying (to him) younger sister who he associates with his mother’s absence.

Song of the Sea 3The film shares something with the mythological creatures it features: it hovers just outside our view. Because it didn’t win the Oscar and is in more limited release than the higher profile nominees, Song of the Sea—as well as The Tale of the Princess Kayuga—will be seen by fewer people, which is unfortunate. The best animated films are works of art and those who appreciate art will find it worth their while to slip into the world of this film to view the wonders inside.

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Written by Kim · Categorized: Animation, Movies

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