Monday, July 30, 2012

Between Books - Tales of a Sixth-Grade Muppet

Cover Tales of a Sixth Grade Muppet
Danvers Blickensderfer really loves Gonzo.  He has a Gonzo t-shirt for 6 days of the week!  Seriously you can’t honor Gonzo every day.  Danvers is a typical 6th grader trying to produce Gonzo style stunts for the pleasure of his friends and class-mates and trying to survive the torture of sharing a room with his evil toddler sister Chloe.  Everything changes for Danvers when in the middle of the night he is transformed from a regular kid into a Muppet.  Danvers balances trying to reverse his condition (under the careful medical eye of Doctor Bob and other favorite Muppets) and balancing the fame that an internship as Gonzo’s assistant with the Muppets and his transformation (seriously he is a Muppet) brings him.  Will Danvers be normal again?  Will his friend and safety coordinator Pasquale be lost in Danvers’ sudden fame?  Will Danvers and his Muppet boy band Mon Swoon outplay the boy band Emo Shun lead by Danvers’s former best friend!  The 6th grade is tough!  
Kirk Scroggs authors and illustrates this story in Tales of a Sixth-Grade Muppet.  Scroggs alternates telling the story between narrative text and cartoons that blend together into one story.  The images are humorous and light.  And the text is easy to read, I read the entire book in a little more than an hour, two train rides and a little lunch time!  It took the Between Tween a few days of off and on reading.  The story itself reminds me of Diary of a Wimpy Kid as represented in the movie with the text itself being what I imagine reading the book would feel like, the Between Tween says there are more pictures in that series.  I found the story to be safe and did not cause me much excitement.  It was amusing but probably not anything I would ever seek out.  I did enjoy seeing and reading the Muppets in book form.  And as a Disney fan I chuckled at references to Mary Poppins and Buzz Lightyear.  But I am pretty sure for the author and publisher that adults who enjoy the book are bonus fans and not the target audience they are trying to capture. 
I am not fully qualified, by age, to provide a fair review to this book.  So I went to the Between Tween for the official Between Disney take!  The Disney Tween states that the book is really really funny.  The Tween’s favorite character was Pepe (who throughout the book has to fight the impression he is a shrimp).  The Tween has seen a lot of Muppet movies in the past but thought Tales of a Sixth-Grade Muppet as a wow.  The Tween thought the pictures were really detailed with the favorite picture sequence being the toothpaste commercial.  The Tween thought the message of the book was to stick with your friends no matter what, which does not sound like a bad message to me.  The Between Tween would reread the book.  Overall the Tween, the real target audience, gives Tales of a Sixth-Grade Muppet a thumbs up and would recommend it. 
Adults, Tales of a Sixth-Grade Muppet may not be for you.  It may provide you some amusement but it’s likely not the sort of book a more mature audience will enjoy.  But, if you have a seven to twelve year old in your life this book would likely make a great gift!  Seriously, didn’t most of us dream of being a Muppet as a kid, and this book will just help feed that desire in your kids.           

Friday, July 27, 2012

Walt's Windows - Mickey's Cornfield


One of my favorite stories in Jack Lindquist’s In Service to the Mouse is set in Betweenland.

Lindquist was flying across Texas one day and realized that he could see circles created by natural gas fields at 35,000 feet.  His mind then jumped to the ability to see a famous three circled profile from a plane.  As he considered the idea, he realized that a Mickey Mouse that could be seen from airplanes would be a good idea for Mickey’s 60th birthday in 1988.  After a vast amount of research it was determined that an Iowa cornfield would provide the best color contrasts to see Mickey Mouse from the air.  Lindquist’s staff contacted Iowa State University (or should we say Between University) and selected together the farm of the Pitzenberger family of Sheffield, Iowa.  In a turn of irony, the Pitzenberger family rented the 3,000 acres from a gentleman named Walt!  The small town embraced the idea of the Mickey Mouse birthday card and used it as an event to promote their small town of 1,224 (Lindquist, 183-4).
An Associated Press story recounts how Joe Pitzenberger created the mouse,
Using a design developed with the help of a surveyor, Joe Pitzenberger planted corn in the shape of Mickey’s head surrounded by oats in a day and a half last spring.  He said it took just three hours longer than usual to plant the field, which has been kept alive by rain that has eluded some other areas in the state (“Iowans help Mickey Mouse Celebrate”)
Magical rain was the key to growing Mickey Mouse in Iowa.  The summer of 1988 was a drought for Iowa.  Yet, the rain came to Sheffield and the crops grew and Mickey Mouse, the crop circle, took shape on a Betweenland field (Lindquist, 185).
The design consists of 6.5 million corn plants surrounded by 300 acres of oats, and its 1.1 miles from the tip of Mickey’s nose to the end of his ear, said Disneyland spokeswoman LouAnne Cappiello (“Iowans help Mickey Mouse Celebrate”).   

Mickey Mouse made f corn from the air.
Photo Taken from www.mouseclubhouse.com
As they say in Field of Dreams, If you build it they will come.  And come they did.  For the official opening Disney put on a Birthday party in Iowa.  Mickey, Minnie, Donald and Goofy all attended and met with guests.  Earforce One, a Mickey shaped hot-air balloon, soared in the Iowa sky.  Around 15,000 people came to celebrate Mickey’s birthday.  On the following weekends Iowans visited Sheffield to see Mickey’s profile from miles around.  The publicity went beyond Iowa as the cornfield was covered by major media outlets.  And overflying airlines alerted passengers to the hidden Mickey outside the airplane (Lindquist, 185). 
Sometimes we dream of Disney, trying to think of ways to reconnect when we live far away from Orlando and Anaheim.  Sometimes we need to remember that the mouse sometimes comes to us!   
 

Monday, July 23, 2012

Goofy Gadgets - Fix-It Felix Jr.

Wreck-It Ralph Poster

If there is one trailer that the Between Kids cannot stop watching it is Wreck-It Ralph.  The trailer shows a very Disney like storyline, the discovery of self, in a very un-princess world.

Ralph may be a bad guy, as they say, but he does not appear to be a bad guy!  The Between Kids take notice every time this trailer pops up and was their favorite of the pre-Brave trailers.  So the enthusiasm is there with key audience demographics.  And they love seeing images of characters from worlds like Super-Mario and gobble up news about appearances by characters like Sonic the Hedgehog.  For me I am looking forward to finding out how Disney will handle a large number of non-Disney characters.
So enthusiasm is high, but that momentum can be lost!  I was more excited for Brave a year before I saw the movie than I was the day I saw it.  I do not know if it was the marketing campaign, my own desire to stay away from spoilers or John Carter fatigue (I have spent so much time defending it), but I was finding myself unexcited about Brave as I entered the theater. 
Maybe Disney has become wise to the fact they need to keep those likely to see their films excited about them in the long months before the release and are looking to new ways to keep that enthusiasm stoked.  One way they are attempting to keep us excited for Wreck-It Ralph is a new app for iOS devices like iPods and iPads called Fix-It Felix Jr. which ties directly into the November movie putting the characters of Ralph and Felix directly into the hands of the future audience.
The game itself uses images we see in the trailer.  Ralph climbs to the top of the screen which has a background that appears to be an apartment building.  He then begins to wreck the building by dropping bricks.  You control Fix-It Felix Jr. as he scurries around the screen fixing the broken windows, doors and shutters on the building.  After everything is fixed Ralph climbs higher and you begin again.  There are obstacles to slow Felix such as ducks, the falling bricks and partitions which limit Felix’s movement.  These obstacles are added as levels increase. Additionally players can pick-up items like additional life or time. 

Scene from Fix-It Felix Jr.

First, I really like the idea of marketing the movie by offering a game, and a free game at that.  I think the idea is brilliant.  Second, when I initially played I enjoyed the game and made it to level 4 after a few plays.  Third, the Between Tween really enjoyed playing and wanted to beat my high score.  Finally it really does have the 8 bit feel of Donkey Kong or Mousetrap from my childhood and I love the trip back into memory lane.
But with all that said I do question the replay value, as it seems to repeat the same goal over and over again.  Fix-It Felix Jr. is no Where’s My Water ? with its growing number of levels and variety.  And I never saw from the trailer the residents of the building throwing Ralph over.  I’m sorry Wreck-It Ralph but I really wanted to see you thrown off the roof. 
If you want a piece of Wreck-It Ralph now, Fix-It Felix Jr. may satisfy your craving temporarily.  The game may not hold you until November, but with a cost of free you can’t go wrong enjoying at the least a few game play sessions.          

Friday, July 20, 2012

Dreaming Disney - Once Upon a Time Season Two Preview

Once Upon a Time Logo


For the Between Family ABC’s Once Upon a Time has become event television in the age of the DVR.  It is the only one show that we watch as near to live as possible (we attempt to start it late enough that we can still fast forward through commercials but end with the live audience).  We just cannot get enough.
At the San Diego Comic Con, ABC released this teaser for Season 2.


Henry makes it clear, Storybrooke may have magic but the end of their problems are far from over.  We have heard we can expect the following in season 2:
·         The nautical legend highlighted in the trailer
·         An expanded role for Belle
·         The casting of Mulan, Sleeping Beauty and Jack of Beanstalk fame
·         A trip to the land of Oz
·         Reveals of Henry’s father, Baelfire’s fate, and Doctor Whale’s true identity
Personally all this news makes me very excited.  The role of Belle makes me wonder if we will see a kinder gentler Rumplestiltskin or will he be out for revenge since the Evil Queen took his love away from him.  Will we see more Mad Hatter, a character whose grayness fascinates me?   Could Tinkerbell and Peter Pan be far behind this initial casting news?  Will the identity of the Red Queen from Wonderland be revealed?
Here are two things I am willing to make solid bets on.  First, magic will complicate Storybrooke.  Our characters have been away from magic and their former lives for a long enough gap that the magic will lead to struggles between old and new identities and relationships.  Second, I am pretty confident that the flashback scenes will feature how Snow White and Prince Charming took the kingdom from the king, which did not result in the king’s death since he is present in Storybrooke!  Of course that is another complicating matter as the king and those that overthrew him are living in the same small Maine community. 
I don’t know about you, but I am very excited that season two is just a few months away and that season one will be released on Blu-Ray and DVD on August 28th.

Monday, July 16, 2012

Between Books - The Imagineering Field Guide to Epcot at Walt Disney World


 The Imagineering Field Guide to Epcot at Walt Disney World provides a visual overview of the Epcot theme park in Orlando.  Alex Wright the author of five Imagineering Field Guides writes this offering.  Wright reviews the concepts and tools of Imagineering for new and old readers.  Wright takes readers through both Future World and World Showcase within the second Walt Disney World theme park.  He provides details to his readers about why and how the Imagineers crafted the stories of Epcot.  The highlight of the text, like the other Field Guides, is pictures with visuals including attraction photos to concept art created by Imagineers.  Like others in the series, the book is setup like a guide book, being small and compact and something one can throw into a backpack or small bag while walking between attractions at Epcot 
This volume follows the same pattern of the other Imagineering Field Guides, and as such readers of other volumes will feel very comfortable with the Epcot edition.  I originally read this volume not because of a future trip as I had with other Imagineering Field Guides.  Instead, I picked the The Imagineering Field Guide to Epcot at Walt Disney World up to help me connect to Epcot out here Between Disney.  The photos, art and insider information about the park I just visited succeeded in helping me to remember the trip I had returned from and fuel my desire for a future trip.  Regardless of which Imagineering Field guide you chose; The Magic Kingdom, Epcot, Animal Kingdom, Disney Hollywood Studios or Disneyland they all are great tools for learning more about the Disney parks and reconnecting with your favorite magical moments.    

Friday, July 13, 2012

Mousey Movie Preview - Oz The Great and Powerful First Trailer

Oz the Great and Powerful Poster



Disney at the 2012 San Diego Comic-Con has released the first Trailer for Oz The Great and Powerful.



What do you think?  Does Disney have another franchise smash in the mold of Pirates?

Personally, I have been somewhat apprehensive.  I really enjoyed Sam Raimi's Spider-Man, but had lost excitement by the third installment in the franchise.  And James Franco has not been a favorite for me, but then I have not disliked him either.  It has a real Alice in Wonderland feel to me in some scenes, with a pinch of John Carter.

Monday, July 9, 2012

Between Books - Building a Company

Cover: Builiding a Company
Almost anyone with a television in the world is aware of some of the entertainment contributions of one founder of the Walt Disney Company, Walt Disney, but often it is forgotten that the company began in 1923 as the Disney Brothers Studio.  Often forgotten is the legacy of the older brother in the Disney partnership, Roy O. Disney.  When I originally read Bob Thomas’ Walt Disney: An American Original I was struck by the loyalty that Roy O. Disney showed his brother and the essential though often invisible role he played in the success of Walt Disney by overseeing the business side of Disney endeavors.  This lead me to seek out more on the life of Roy O. Disney and the first and most prominent source I reached for was a lesser know book by Thomas, Building a Company: Roy O. Disney and the Creation of An Entertainment Empire.
Thomas outlines Roy O. Disney’s life from birth on June 24, 1893 to his death on December 20, 1971.  As a youth he developed a strong relationship with his much younger brother Walter.  The two boys often worked and played together despite a sizable age difference.  Disney left his job as a bank teller to serve in the U.S. Navy during World War I.  Having acquired tuberculosis during his naval service, Disney relocated to a veteran’s hospital in the Los Angeles area.  His brother Walt followed soon after his Kansas City cartoon studio became bankrupt.  Walt asked for Roy’s assistance and the next morning Roy checked out of the hospital never to return for his wartime affliction.  Forming a partnership called the Disney Brothers Studio, Walt oversaw the creative endeavors while Roy guided their business interests and occasionally operated a camera.  Over the next 50 years Roy oversaw the growth of the Walt Disney Company, his suggestion for a  name change, that transitioned from cartoon shorts to animated features, live-action movies, television programs and two theme parks.  During all of these projects Thomas makes it clear that Roy O. Disney dutifully supported the dreams of Walt Disney, though not always in agreement, and acquired the resources and funding needed to make Walt Disney’s ideas come alive. 
I really found this book a delight and helped fill my need to know more about this great man and co-founder of the Walt Disney Company.  Thomas does an excellent job of introducing us to Roy O. Disney the man.  We get the picture a loyal man who followed his younger brother into a questionable future based on his faith in that brother’s ability.  Roy O. Disney was also the man who finished Walt Disney’s dream of Walt Disney World, admittedly not as ambitious as Walt may have dreamed but one that was still made available for public enjoyment.  It is the picture of the Walt and Roy O. Disney relationship that captures my imagination the most.  The two men were in many ways different yet thoroughly attached to each other.  And we see Roy O. Disney as the quieter brother, coming home after work for time with his wife and son while Walt was the public face of the company and in the eye of the fans.  Especially gripping for me is the retelling of Roy O. Disney’s last visit with his dying brother as Walt dreamed one last time with his older brother.
Along with Roy O. Disney the brother we also get a picture of the business man.  Roy O. Disney was very personal in his interactions with associates.  For example his trips to Europe included his wife Edna, who would entertain the wife’s of Disney staff members and contacts abroad.  He was a man who put a personal touch on a growing company.  And these personal relationships greatly benefited the company’s bottom line as it expanded into new markets.  Additionally in the personal area we see his interactions with his family including his long relationship with Edna and his love for his son Roy E. Disney.  It would be easy to write a book about the business choices of Roy O. Disney from founding a start-up to evolving into a publicly traded company.  But instead Thomas does an excellent job of showing Roy O. Disney the man. 
Thomas yet again provides solid readable writing that Betweenlanders will enjoy.  Additionally as a historian his book is very well researched including interviews with prominent Disney personalities and legends and use of documents found in the Disney Archives, including Roy O. Disney’s personal and business correspondence.  Building a Company is the most extensive profile of Roy O. Disney available to the public.   
As someone who has become a fan of Roy O. Disney’s life and legacy I highly recommend this book for all Between Book libraries.