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GOD’S
ARMY
by Geoffrey Card
2001, Excel Entertainment Publishing
Trade paperback, 200 pages
$14.98
Click
here to order.
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Pod People
from a Spacetime Nexus
by
D. Michael Martindale
The film God’s
Army was a groundbreaking work: a film made by an LDS filmmaker
for an LDS audience, distributed and exhibited in the regular Hollywood
venues. A film that didn’t want to convert or inspire--not that
writer/director/ producer/star Richard Dutcher would have complained
if it did-- but a film that would simply tell an interesting, honest
story about the people he loves and is a part of: Mormons.
It was a milestone
for LDS art, something that had never been done before. And now
something else new has been done, something that must surely be
the baptism of fire of LDS commercial entertainment into the real
world: a novelization of the film. By this we must surely acknowledge
that we have arrived.
But I’m just
getting started. This must be some kind of nexus in the spacetime
continuum, one of those things that causes clocks to run backwards
and cosmic geodesics to contort into Moebius strips. Not only was
an "it-can't-be-done" mainstream LDS film made, exhibited,
and reasonably successful, not only did that instantly result in
a novelization of the film (where’s the novelization of Testaments
of One Fold and One Shepherd?), but the author chosen for the
novelization is an author who has never been published, an author
who’s main interest is also filmmaking, and an author whose father
is the inestimable Orson Scott Card, vastly successful science fiction
author, who blazed a few LDS trails of his own in the world of storytelling.
But it doesn’t
stop there. Orson Scott also wrote a film novelization--something
he swore he’d never do--of James Cameron’s Abyss. This book
was a groundbreaker in its own right: a novelization that both author
and filmmaker wanted to be in a class by itself. This novelization
would actually follow the final version of the film--not an earlier
draft of the script, complete with egg for the face of the poor
author whose good- faith efforts to reproduce the movie get betrayed
on the editor’s cutting room floor. And this novelization would
strive for quality--a science fiction novel that could stand on
its own. How could it not succeed, with Orson Scott Card writing
it?
The book Abyss
filled in the background and motivations of both the human characters
and the fascinating aliens, information missing from the film. As
father Card did in his novelization, so did son Card do in his,
revealing to us thoughts and off-screen activities of God’s Army
characters lacking in the film.
If that isn’t
enough, Orson Scott Card is also deep into finagling a project which
is the reverse of God’s Army--getting his groundbreaking
science fiction book Ender’s Game made into a movie. A “filmization,”
if you will.
Which such
a Gordian tangle of parallels, contrasts, and coincidences, I fully
expect an alternate universe Enterprise D to slip through the spacetime
nexus and save Earth from some bizarre planet-busting threat, perhaps
Bill Gates’ Microborg. (Resistance is futile.)
Now that I’ve
had some fun, maybe I ought to tell you what I think of the book.
I can answer that in one sentence: It’s a novelization.
The movie plot
is faithfully presented, the characters are all there doing the
things you saw them do in the film. It’s all very familiar.
And yet not.
The Elder Dalton in the book is not the same Elder Dalton in the
film. He’s author Geoff Card’s interpretation of Elder Dalton. The
same with apostate Elder Kinegar, black Elder Banks, cute and intimidating
Sister Fronk--they’re all there, and not quite there.
Having seen
the film first, I inevitably preferred the film characters. To me,
they are the real ones, where Card’s incarnations are interesting
pod people who look like the real thing, but somehow don’t feel
like them. Card necessarily ascribed motives, thoughts, and attitudes
that weren’t in the film, because this is a film novelization, and
film novelizations must do that.
Not that his
interpretations weren’t interesting; not that Card didn’t do a fine
job crafting and writing the book. It’s just that it’s a novelization,
no more--but also no less. Card gets the job done as any good journeyman
writer would do. If you like the God’s Army film and you
like novelizations, you will assuredly like Geoff Card’s book.
I don’t care
for novelizations. I found it difficult to get into the book, because
it had the whiff of novelization all over it. But eventually Card
overcame these odds, at least enough to make the book interesting
to read. Even touching in spots.
One cannot
fault Card for the weaknesses of the book. They are inherent in
the format. He was an author-for-hire. The title page of the book
says “Copyright Richard Dutcher,” not “Copyright Geoffrey Card.”
In the words of Papagallo in the Mad Max movie Road Warrior,
“He fulfilled his contract. He’s an honorable man.” But I for one
would have preferred spending my time picking up the latest book
by father Card and diving into that with relish.
All this begs
the question, what would a Geoff Card book be like that he designed
and wrote himself from the ground up? To me this is the most interesting
part of the whole experience. Card now has his name out there, he
has credentials; he’s a published author, and we know he can write
well. I look forward to finding out what he can do on his own.
Whether that
will happen remains to be seen. After all, Card is really a filmmaker,
not an author. He attends the Chapman University School of Film
and Television. We may have to wait for his first feature film to
find out what he can do on his own.
And wouldn’t
that be icing on the cake of our spacetime nexus. A groundbreaking
LDS film by Geoffrey Card--novelization by Richard Dutcher.
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© 2001 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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