US – Sunday, July 5
The week's releases
Metro staff reviews the latest CDs, DVDs and books for your reading pleasure.
 
The gangster of Hollywood
FEATURE. Johnny Depp doesn’t know what time it is. Though he technically calls an adorable village in France home and owns an island in the Caribbean, the mercurial actor spends so much time working that his internal clock is all out of whack.
 
 
Directorial debut is a shot at the ‘Moon’
INTERVIEW. When directors are limited to a $5 million budget and a 33-day shooting schedule, they usually won’t do anything too arduous — especially for their first films. But director Duncan Jones, 37, tells us that he “wanted to do something with ambition” for his debut flick. So instead, Jones, who is the son of David Bowie, decided to make the sci-fi adventure “Moon,” which opens Friday. The affable Brit explains how.
 
The Beckhams’ island getaway
GOSSIP. According to the Sun, David Beckham is planning a trip to Necker Island, Richard Branson’s private island hideaway, to celebrate his 10th wedding anniversary with Victoria Beckham. And the best part? It only costs $51,000 a night to have the whole island to themselves.
 
Bale does light-lifting
 MOVIES. Christian Bale is more relaxed than usual, and with good reason. The heavy lifting in promoting his latest film, “Public Enemies,” falls to Johnny Depp. For once, the success or failure of the movie doesn’t rest on Bale’s shoulders. There’s no talk of on-set outbursts or franchise potential. And for that, he’s grateful — and cheerful.
 
Published 19:41, December the 1st, 2008
 
 

Enter 'The Sandman'

Gaiman talks legacy of ‘pirate literature’ and sneaking into public consciousness

'Sand' castle

“The Sandman” title was published in 75 monthly issues from 1989 through 1996. “The Absolute Sandman” collection, the fourth and final edition of which was recently published, is a gorgeous reproduction of the series in hard bound, handsome volumes with extensive bonus material such as original sketches, scripts and extra short stories. When it first appeared 20 years ago it combined a literary credibility with a crossover appeal and radically changed the pop culture landscape for years to come. We spoke with the British ex-pat about the recent release of the fourth “The Absolute Sandman” collection and the legacy of the series.

METRO/LO
 

INTERVIEW. With its swirling blend of mythology, fantasy and horror, Neil Gaiman’s seminal “The Sandman” series, about the Lord of Dreams, remains one of the finest achievements in comic book history to date.


How do you explain “The Sandman”’s sustained crossover appeal over all these years?

If you asked me while it was going on what the appeal of “Sandman” was I would’ve talked about it not being costumes and capes, [but] about writing something for an audience of people like me, and hoping that they were out there. But I don’t think even at my most madly optimistic I would ever have predicted a future in which 20 years after the first issue it would be selling more copies with each passing year.

Has the genre ghettoization of graphic novels and literature abated since then?

Well, for a start, no one would have used the phrase ‘graphic novels’ because nobody knew what it meant. Today, of course, no one knows what it means, but we use it all the time, which is different. ... Back then “Sandman” wasn’t making it onto university syllabuses. Students would discover it and the professors would have no idea what they were talking about and they would make their professors read it. Now, of course, you have professors making their students read it, which is kind of different. When we began, “Sandman” was pirate literature. The idea that you could have a quality monthly comic with a story was strange.
 
Do you think it was sort of a Trojan Horse, sneaking literature in through the back door?


I don’t think it was exactly a Trojan Horse, but whatever it was, the magic of it was that it was happening in a place that nobody was looking. ... I think part of the strength and the power that it had was that it existed in the gutter. Nobody looked and nobody cared, and that in itself is a wonderful and empowering sort of thing because it gives you complete freedom.

 
 
MMMpod
The June edition of MMMpod features an interview with Perry Farrell on getting Jane's Addiction back together, as well as a talk with actor Ed Helms about his love/hate relationship with a capella music. We also have new music from Phoenix, Magic Magic, Lady Sovereign, and a classic from Booker T. & the MGs. As always, there's a chance to win a whole lot of free music.
 
 
Metro Life Panel