Where The Wild Things Are

Where The Wild Things Soundtrack Streaming

Yeah Yeah Yeah's frontwoman Karen O "and The Kids" are doing the soundtrack for the upcoming Spike Jonze film Where The Wild Things Are.  The soundtrack hits stores tomorrow but you can preview a stream of the album right here.  Get ready for the Wild Things train to gain some serious steam in the next few weeks leading up to it's October 16th release.  Rock.

 

Send The Wild Things Wherever In Photoshop

Think those skateboard decks pictured above are awesome? Want em?  For free?  Just enter the Where The Wild Things Ought To Be Contest over at the Spike Jonze Wild Things based We Love You So blog.  The details are sparse and from what I can tell there is no published deadline so I'd get to it sooner than later.

Here’s how: Where The Wild Things Ought To Be – the basic idea is to send in images or GIFs or videos inserting Wild Things artwork, clips, etc into places that could use some “wilding-up.”

You can check out some of my favorites of the sample entries posted on their blog by clicking the thumbnails below

Dave Eggers Sends Max At Sea To The New Yorker

Awesome author Dave Eggers (A Heartbreaking Work Of Staggering Genius, You Shall Know Our Velocity) wrote the screenplay for the upcoming Where The Wild Things Are adaptation with Spike Jonze. Eggers is also releasing a novel loosely based on the original Sednak work. The New Yorker now has a short piece titled Max At Sea available for your perusal. Below is the first few paragraphs so you can get a little taste of Eggers in the Wildthings world.

Max knew that a bunk bed was the perfect structure to use when building an indoor fort. First of all, bunk beds have a roof, and a roof is essential if you’re going to have an observation tower. And you need an observation tower if you’re going to spot invading armies before they breach your walls and overtake your kingdom. Anyone without a bunk bed would have a much harder time maintaining a security perimeter, and if you can’t do that you don’t stand a chance.

Max had just done a quick survey of the area surrounding his bunk kingdom and was now down on the lower bunk, where he could be unseen and unknown. For a while, he thought about what his science teacher had been talking about earlier that day—that someday the sun would die. Mr. Malhotra had sensed that the mood in the class was darkening, that he’d scared his third graders, and had tried to brighten things: “What am I talking about? I’m being such a downer. Don’t worry about the sun dying! You and everyone you know will be long gone by then!”

It was a very strange time in Max’s life. The day before, his sister had tried, by proxy, to kill him. Her tobacco-chewing friends had chased him into his snow fort, and at the moment when he felt safest, in the cool white hollow, they had jumped on the roof, burying him. His sister had done nothing to help, and then had driven off with them, and to punish her, because she was no longer his sister, he’d doused her room with water. Buckets and buckets he’d emptied everywhere, in a furious, joyous process. It had been great, and felt so right, until his mother came home and found what he’d done. She was mad, Claire was mad, and so, tonight, the only person in the house who seemed to like him was his mom’s chinless boyfriend, Gary, and even thinking that sent a shudder through him.

Max, tired of thinking in his brain, decided to think on paper, and so retrieved his journal from under the bed. His father had given him the journal shortly after he left—how long ago now? Three years?—and had, in white-out, written the words “WANT JOURNAL” on the cover. In this book his father had written as inscription and directive, “Write what you want. Every day, or as often as you can, write what you want. That way, whenever you’re confused or rudderless, you can look to this book, and be reminded where you want to go and what you’re looking for.” His father had printed, by hand, three beginnings on every page.

Max found a pen and began:

I WANT Gary to fall into some kind of bottomless hole.
I WANT Claire to get her foot caught in a bear trap.
I WANT Claire’s friends to die by flesh-eating tapeworms.

Head on over to The New Yorker for the rest of Max At Sea

Maurice Sendak's Thoughts On Spike Jonze's Wildthings

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Comic Con debuted this featurette today for Spike Jonze live action adaptation of Maurice Sendak's classic book Where The Wild Things Are. The feature mainly is about the relationship between Sendak and Jonze and it seems more than a little obvious that Sendak sees a lot of himself in Jonze. If this does anything besides get you even more ridiculously excited about the film than you need to get your crazy examined.

Where The Wild Things Are hits theaters October 16th so you can be counting on quite a bit of Wildthings costumes at whatever Halloween functions you are attending. And that my friends is the epitome of awesomeness.

Where The Wild Things Are

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Release Date: 
Oct 16 2009
Director: 
Spike Jonze
Cast: 
Forest Whitaker
Cast: 
Katherine Keener
Cast: 
Max Records
Synopsis: 
An adaptation of Maurice Sendak's classic children's story, where Max, a disobedient little boy sent to bed without his supper, creates his own world--a forest inhabited by ferocious wild creatures that crown Max as their ruler.

I am so excited for this movie I can't even talk about it reasonably.

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