Here Jonell dreamcasts an adaptation of her new book, The Sign of the Cat:
I suspect the movie would have to be animated�there are just too many talking cats. So I�d want Pixar to do the animation, and Pete Docter to direct. There�s a bit of local interest there�he grew up in Bloomington, Minnesota, and I grew up in Richfield, its next-door neighbor! But the real reason I�d like Pete Docter is that his montage of Carl and Ellie aging, in the movie Up, is one of the best things I�ve ever seen done.Visit Lynne Jonell's website.
I�d have Pixar use performance capture so the animated human actors would not only sound, but also look and move like themselves. So with that in mind, here goes:
Choosing a child actor to play Duncan, the central character, is tough. Movies take a long time to make, and child actors just keep growing up. But since I write fantasy, I don�t consider that I have to be realistic about this; I�d choose Tom Holland, back when he was twelve. I loved his work in The Impossible and he�s even got the look I imagined for Duncan, a kid who longs for success but whose mother warns him to never, never do his best. I already know Tom can do adventure with lots of drama, and deliver an understated yearning; the big question is, does he like cats? And how does he feel about a tiger as supporting actor?
To play Sylvia McKay, Duncan�s mother: Meryl Streep, because she can do anything and I�ve loved every movie she�s ever done. She�d be marvelous as a woman hiding who she really was, fearful yet incredibly brave, and I bet she could pull off the violin scenes and really make us believe in her musical genius. To be the mother of an eleven year old boy I�d make her 35 or 40, though.
To play the Earl of Merrick: Ryan Gosling. He�s got that great �trust me� face with the little sly smile that makes you wonder what�s going on underneath. I loved him in Lars and the Real Girl, but I think he�s got it in him to be a fabulous villain, too. He�d have to first be credible as the hero the whole nation adores, and then let that little smile give us a faint wisp of doubt as to his true intentions. He�s too young, though; I�d age him about ten years.
For the princess: Keisha Castle-Hughes, at age fourteen. She was wonderful in Whale Rider, passionate and intense, and with her hair long and in a braid she�d look exactly like the princess of my mind. She has a natural athleticism, too, which I see in the princess who runs and climbs all over Traitor Island.
And the voices of Fia, the kitten, and Brigadier, the tiger? I think I�ll leave those up to the director. I can hardly wait to see what Pete comes up with!
--Marshal Zeringue
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