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Whedon

Whedon under tsunami, image courtesy Wolf Cocklin

The Melbourne Writers Festival kicked off with Friday night’s dual keynotes and the announcement of the Age Book of the Year. The big gong went to Alex Miller’s Lovesong, but if you were to believe the geeks on the web the night belonged to a man with thinning strawberry blond hair.

From the outset questions acknowledged sci-fi writer and director Joss Whedon as god though the man himself dodged the question with “I don’t believe in me, which is actually awkward.” His crowd loved every moment of it. Over at the Book Show blog, Foz Meadows thought he spoke “like a man for whom everyday conversation is just a different sort of script; the kind of thing you can work at in your spare time, so that it comes out as effortlessly in real life as it does on screen.”

Hoist

Hoist – where art and poems meet laundry

Thuy Linh Nguyen agreed that Whedon’s speech is unique because he’s “one of those comedic personalities with full-formed quips flying out of their mouths” and enjoyed the way he answered questions about if he’d ever thought about making a Sundance-style arthouse movie by saying “‘I’m a Star Wars guy.”

For Martin Pedler, Whedon’s interest in superheroes was more intriguing. Whedon “wasn’t convinced you could do a true superhero film – but also that Hollywood’s now jumped far too quickly to films like Watchmen, Kick-Ass, and Dark Knight. He wanted to enjoy more examples of ‘straight’ superhero movies before we started deconstructing them, and tearing their poor heroes apart.”

But for Gizmodo the quote of the night came from the discussion about how the internet had been so helpful developing an audience for Buffy the Vampire Slayer. They report his response as “[Adopts mock-cool voice] I just took it in my stride: you know, they invented the Internet for me. Now they use it for other stuff too.”


3 comments so far:

Next up for me is Tim Flannery tonight - he's always so inspiring though I want him to wear a hat. He seems to have dumped the Akubra at events I've seen him at lately which is a shame.

Jase Slattery
30 August at 10:30AM

You should have seen him at Reading on Vocation (with Ramona Koval) - he was wearing a leather jacket and looked like a total bad boy, albeit one with puppy dog eyes.

I'm looking forward to Liner Notes (Fleetwood Mac), as I heard the last one was hilarious. And The Ethical Journalist Online.

Jon
30 August at 11:17AM

The Joss quotes of ease sure came thick and fast..."I used to think television was bad stuff for dumb people." Joss, you saved it, but sadly much of it still is. And another real highlight was when he knocked his microphone, apologised to it, looked at us and said, "I just apologised to a microphone, my self-esteem needs some work." Funny, self-deprecating, clever and charming. There is good reason for Whedon worship, it was a rare treat to be in the room with television's Messiah.


30 August at 11:43AM

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