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The Order of Oddfish

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Tacoma Screening of the 90-Second Newbery Film Festival this Saturday!

We’re having two screenings of the 90-Second Newbery Film Festival this weekend: Saturday (2/23) in Tacoma, WA, at the Tacoma Public Library, and two screenings on Sunday (2/24) in Portland, OR at the Central Library downtown. My co-host on Saturday is author Kevin Emerson (The Lost Code and more) and my co-host Sunday is author Dale Basye (Heck: Where the Bad Kids Go). Check events sidebar for details!

Last time I highlighted 90-Second Newbery videos I received from Portland. Today I want to focus on Tacoma. I previously featured two versions from Tacoma of Frog and Toad Together, by Sara Truscott and Jake & Nikki, respectively. But those aren’t the only fantastic videos I got from Tacoma!

For instance, check out the above 90-second adaptation of the very first Newbery Medal winner, The Story of Mankind by Hendrik Willem van Loon (1922!). It takes guts to adapt this 500+ page book, but Jennings Mergenthal and Max Lau of Tacoma were up to the task. With stop-motion clay, no less! I loved it! The running gag about the Crusades had exquisite comic timing. The absurd “India” conclusion to the “Exploration” bit was funny too. I loved the way we could watch humanity evolve from a fish to a modern human all within seconds! And the sound effects were bang-on, too—from the clanging swords to the superheroic music when Napoleon appears.

With Max and Jennings’ permission, I tweaked the sound effects a little for the video featured above. If you want to see their original version, along with their other stop-motion clay creations, check out their YouTube channel here. Lots of great videos here!

Another standout from Tacoma was also comes with the Newbery’s inaugural year of 1922, the Honor Book The Old Tobacco Shop by William Bowen. Here adapted by a mysterious Tacoma entity known only as “Parker”:

I never read The Old Tobacco Shop, but now it’s clear I absolutely must read it as soon as possible. A boy smokes some magical tobacco and goes on a hallucinatory journey with clown-pirates? They don’t make children’s books like they used to. Looking forward to showing this on Saturday!

To see all the 90-Second Newberys I received from Tacoma this year, head over to this special page I set aside for them. Really intriguing stuff, including The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle done entirely with dogs!

Portland Screening of the 90-Second Newbery Film Festival this Sunday!

I’m in Chicago right now, but in a few short hours I’ll be getting on a plane and flying to Portland, Oregon! Why? The Portland screening of the 2nd Annual 90-Second Newbery Film Festival is coming up this Sunday, February 24th! Co-hosted by me and Heck series author Dale Basye! We received many great submissions from the Portland area this year, and I want to feature a few of them on the blog today. (We’ll be talking about the movies from the Tacoma screening on 2/23 later.)

Above is another very enjoyable 90-Second Newbery from Portland, courtesy of the Fairview-Columbia Library’s Teen Council, of Scott O’Dell’s 1961 Newbery Medal winner Island of the Blue Dolphins. Done with homemade puppets and cardboard cutouts! Ingenious puppet work, good use of the flashlight as a spotlight, and I especially liked the exchange “Come back or I’ll be stuck on the island for 20 years!” “But it’s my fishing spear!” “Fiiiiine” and when Karana bellows “Revenge!” (Nice flying devil-fish, too.)

In a previous post I featured the two versions of Arnold Lobel’s 1973 Honor Book Frog and Toad Together I got from Portland Community Media and the Seaside Public Library (check them out!). I’ve also featured Portlanders Xela and Riley’s Ramona Quimby, Age 8 previously. You can see those, and the rest of the entries from the Portland area for 2013, here.

Thanks so much, and I’m looking forward to meeting you all in person this Sunday!

RECAP: Chicago screening of the 2nd Annual 90-Second Newbery Film Festival

That happy crowd above? It’s the audience at last week’s Chicago screening of the 2nd Annual 90-Second Newbery Film Festival. It was great fun! Thanks to everyone who came! (Don’t know what the 90-Second Newbery is? Here you go.)

If you’re interested, Time Out Chicago did a feature of some of their favorite 90-Second Newbery movies from this year. Go watch them!

We filled the 385-seat Pritzker Auditorium of the Harold Washington Library in downtown Chicago. Thanks to Emily Schwartz, founding impresario of The Strange Tree Group, for these pictures of the evening! We already screened the film festival in New York back in December. Don’t forget, we’re going to screen the film festival in Tacoma, WA on 2/23 and Portland, OR on 2/24!

Thanks to my co-host for the evening, Blue Balliett, bestselling author of Chasing Vermeer and other children’s books (including the upcoming Hold Fast, which I loved!). Blue was everything I could’ve asked for in a co-host, from her able banter right down to her glamorous gown, which had a black-and-white stole that was itself a sly Chasing Vermeer reference! Here we are singing the 90-Second Newbery theme song (b’garg, nobody videotaped it in Chicago! But here’s what it sounded like when Jon Scieszka and I sang it at the New York screening):

A funny thing . . . The night before the screening, I finished all my preparation and decided to settle in and watch the whole film festival screening on my computer, just to make sure all was well. I poured myself a nice glass of wine and . . . immediately spilled it all over my computer! Destroying it! With twelve hours to go before the screening!

Needless to say, I was freaking out. But thanks to my brother-in-law Chris and my upstairs neighbor David (and the fact my computer automatically backs up everything into the cloud via BackBlaze, and a couple trips to the Mac Store), I was able to pull everything together in time for the screening. But: frantic!

Here are some more choice shots from the screening. This first one is crowd response from when Chicago theater group Elephant and Worm (who did this year’s musical adaptation of Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH and last year’s musical adaptation of The Twenty-One Balloons) did a short audience-participation skit after their movie:

Here’s a shot from the first movie, Bookie Woogie Blog’s masterful retelling of Arnold Lobel’s 1973 Newbery Honor Book Frog and Toad Together:

The casts of many of the movies were in attendance, including Izzy, Zach, Alex, Amy, and Asher from Burley Elementary in Chicago, with whom I worked to make this 90-Second Newbery movie of Margi Preus’ Heart of Samurai entirely in Japanese, in the style of an Akira Kurosawa movie. It was great seeing them again after working so hard with them on this movie last year!

Other Chicago-area folks who showed up were Larissa Zageris’ students of Chase Elementary who made a horror-movie-trailer version of An American Plague, the Aurora Library that did a Real World version of Ingrid Law’s Savvy, and the Norborg family that made a very cute Belling the Tiger, all of which can be seen here. We also had an avant-garde version of Dark Star of Itza by my old friend Max Pitchkites (check out his Order of Odd-Fish art!) and an epic Tale of Despereaux by Play Mechanics. Not to mention another great puppet version of Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH from Drummond Montessori and an assured, cinematic The Giver from Ian of Westmont, IL. And that’s just the Chicago area!

As with every 90-Second Newbery Film Festival screening, we featured some comical interludes. Now, since the Newbery Medal winner last year, Jack Gantos, spent 15 months in the federal pen over smuggling some contraband back when he was 20, I decided to investigate other Newbery winners to see if they also had unsavory pasts. Many of them did! So I decided to do a quiz about the Dark Side of the Newbery with a volunteer from the audience. All true, mind you. Can you guess the answers to the questions below?

Answers: A, B, B, and C.

We also played a game in honor of this year’s 75th Anniversary of the Caldecott Medal, in which children’s picture book author and artist Aaron Zenz faced off against a young audience member, trying to draw in 75 seconds what they think the cover of a particular obscure Caldecott-winning book might look like. (Aaron is also the paterfamilias behind the (home-schooled!) family that made some of the best 90-Second Newbery videos I’ve received: a shadow-puppet version of Where the Mountain Meets the Moon, an animated version of The Black Cauldron, and this year’s aforementioned hilarious Muppets-style version of Frog and Toad Together). Here are Aaron and our young volunteer furiously drawing:

While we were waiting for them to draw their covers, we played a game of “If They Mated” with various Newbery winners:

Aaron managed to bring his many kids, whom I was delighted to meet after the show!

Now, some thanks are in order. The Chicago screening never would’ve happened without my main man at the CPL, Andrew Medlar:

The “Dark Side of the Newbery” research and “If They Mated” graphic work was courtesy of friend, librarian, and partner-in-crime Eti Berland. Thanks to Aaron Zenz for doing the 75-Second Caldecott with us. And of course thanks to everyone who made a movie this year, especially those who showed up at the screening. Thanks to the Book Table from Oak Park who showed up to sell books. And thanks to all the folks at the library who worked hard to make this a success!

The deadline for movies for the 3rd Annual 90-Second Newbery Film Festival is December 2013. Get cracking!

We’ll wrap this up with the closing montage we showed of all the movies we featured, plus a few extra pictures (thanks to Mark Greenberg of Mayfair Workshop for the music!)