andraste: Why, yes, this is my tentacle sex icon ... (Shiny Objects)
It is the time on Yuletide when we all take off our Santa disguises and tell everyone what we wrote. But first: I got three lovely gift stories this year, two from my assigned writer and a treat!

Snickfic wrote me TWO Saga stories about Lying Cat, Lying to a Lying Cat and Not A Hound. If you have the same reaction to Saga and Lying Cat that I do ("IT'S THE GREATEST COMIC EVER! SHE'S A KITTY!") then you really need to read both of these. Together, they provide both a beginning and an ending for her story. And until it gets jossed, that is so my headcanon for where Lying Cat will end up.

On top of that, I got a The Secret World treat story The Wrong Place, Wrong Time Girl from Moontyger! It captures the atmosphere of the game remarkably well, and it was great to see Marianne's story expanded beyond the confines of Solomon Island and her protective suit.

(If I sound more squeeful about my gifts than my treat, it's not because I didn't love the treat just as much, but because I suffer from the effect described in this handy graph.)

Writing-wise, it turned out to be an angsty, slashy Christmas for me. (Entirely by accident - I was working on a few other treats, but didn't get them finished in time. I guess that's what New Year's Resolutions are for.)

This was my assigned story:

Phil and the Yellow Dwarf (1480 words) by Andraste
Fandom: George and the Red Giant
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: Author Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Relationships: Phil Beard/George Newbould
Summary: Phil and George meet again under a different sun.

If you are wondering what George and the Red Giant is, it is a gloriously weird audio play in which Peter Jurasik and Andreas Katsulas play two contemporary Americans who find themselves on a strange world under a giant red sun. Where they are also trapped in the bodies of giant flying lemurs. And it only gets weirder and better from there.

(When I googled to find that link, I found that my story is now the fifth link down. Which I guess just goes to show that the source is indeed obscure. And makes me hope that Peter Jurasik and the people at Seeing Ear Theatre don't go around googling their old projects. Not that the slash would surprise them in this case.)

And then I wrote this treat:

White Devil (1215 words) by Andraste
Fandom: Tintin (Comics)
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: Author Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Relationships: Chang Chong-Chen/Tintin
Summary: Tintin takes a wrong turn on the way down the mountain. (Or: a missing scene from Tintin in Tibet.)

Tintin/Chang is one of my childhood OTPs, and I've been meaning to write something about them ever since I started writing fanfiction. It only took thirteen years.


There is a long story about how I wrote my assignment (seriously, it may be longer than the fic) but I think I'll save that for another day. So, in summary: I got delightful presents, wrote about characters I've been meaning to get to for more than a decade, and produced fanfic about a source that nobody has ever written about before. Definitely a good Yuletide!
andraste: Why, yes, this is my tentacle sex icon ... (Shiny Objects)
Ever since I heard that Steven Speilberg and Peter Jackson were making this film, I have felt a blend of anticipation and nervousness. You see, I have wanted someone to make a Tintin movie since I was a child. The Nelvana animated series was pretty good, but I have always longed for an adaption of Tintin that would, well, adapt rather than just animate. Luckily I was not disappointed.

The film condenses several different comic adventures and adds stuff, but it gets all the things I love most about Tintin right. The Thom(p)sons! Captain Haddock! SNOWY!

I think what I loved most was the level of background detail, especially the stuff that only the comic fans would get. (I could tell the two people next to me in the theater were readers, because they laughed with me at the tins of crab meat on the dock.) Attention to background detail was a hallmark of the comics, and its nice to see all the little things here.

What I was most concerned about when I heard they were doing a film adaptation was whether they would get Captain Haddock right. When I heard they were casting Andy Serkis, I relaxed, and I was right to do so. He's marvellous in this, and gets across all that glorious drunken Haddock personality. I had a moment of 'bwah?' when I first heard the accent, but Scottish seems to work for Serkis and the geography of all this is pretty vague anyway. (The English translations never really specified where exactly Haddock is meant to be from; I don't know if the Belgian originals had any more to say on the subject.) They were absolutely right to pick The Crab With the Golden Claws and The Secret of the Unicorn for the first story, since it gives us the story of how Tintin and Haddock meet and become BFFs.

I am also glad to report that the film contained sufficient Snowy. I was a bit worried about this, since screen adaptations understandably leave out his little asides, but he gets plenty to do and saves the day more the once. And is also fluffy and adorable.

I may have made high-pitched squeaking noises when they first mentioned spoiler. )

Today I went to the IMDB message boards and found a bunch of idiots claiming that no true fan of the comics could possibly like the movie. Then I rolled my eyes a lot and plotted to see it again next weekend. (I mean, I am cool with other people not liking things I like. Just not with declaring people who like the film fake fans!)

The only thing I am sad about is that I have to wait until at least 2014 to see a sequel, and that they are probably never going to adapt The Blue Lotus and Tintin in Tibet.

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andraste: The reason half the internet imagines me as Patrick Stewart. (Default)
Andraste

February 2026

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