I'm really excited about this movie as well. The first I heard about it was on October 21 in a post on Peter T. Chattaway's (a movie reviewer for Christianity Today) blog. In his post, Terry Mattingly on the next VeggieTales movie, he talks about how Big Idea's last big screen effort, Jonah, was a failure that bankrupted the company and how they are using a different tactic with Pirates:
Quoted Text
This time around, the vegetables don't quote scripture and their adventure doesn't turn into a funny version of a Bible story. Still, the artist also known as Bob the Tomato stressed that Veggie fans don't have to worry that these pirates have abandoned the faith.
"You can do a story like this one of two ways," said Phil Vischer, who created Big Idea, Inc., and continues to work as a writer and performer for the company.
"You can say, 'Let's start with a Bible story and then we'll figure out where our characters fit into it.' When you do this, you know that you already have a story and some characters and there is a biblical message in there. The challenge is figuring out how to make it VeggieTales story. You have to find the humor."...
If the first approach to telling stories starts with the Bible and then blends in humor, the second begins with a funny story and then tries to blend in some faith. That's what happened in 2003 when Vischer had his rowboat vision and wrote the script for "The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything."
"You can do it either way. This time, we just started out with the slacker pirates and we went from there," he said. "When you go this route, someone always has to ask, 'So what's the lesson here?' I usually have to say, 'I don't know right now, but we'll dig around until we find one.' "
These were some pretty significant ideas to mull around--especially for someone like me who considers himself a Christian writer and must confront these ideas in my own work. (I'm not 100% sure which approach I think is best.) I'm hoping Pirates will be both funny and uplifting...and incredibly successful! |