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Mort by Terry Pratchett
Mort by Terry Pratchett













Mort by Terry Pratchett

And on the page, it follows an angel and demon attempting to thwart an actually-quite-pleasant 11-year-old antichrist. The 1990 book was co-written by Neil Gaiman and was one of, astonishingly, five new Pratchett novels published that year. Each attempt, in its own way, fell apart. In fact, prior to Amazing Maurice only three of his 60-odd novels- Good Omens, Mort, and Truckers-got anywhere close to making it over the line and into the projection booth. The history of Pratchett on screen is a cautionary tale, pitted with good intentions, Hollywood big shots missing the point, tantalizing leads, and ultimate disappointment. The late author’s extremely protective attitude to his work made him wary of big name producers (“I don’t need the money, I’ve got money,” he would say) while the projects that did get through his finely-honed bullshit filter were doomed to languish in development hell, sometimes for decades. Studios have been sniffing around Pratchett’s work since the 1980s, and there have been several near misses over the years. So putting Pratchett on the big screen, with the accompanying budget, should be a no-brainer. Meanwhile several of his novels have been made successfully for the small screen, in stop-motion, traditional animation and live-action.

Mort by Terry Pratchett

Some of these books were adapted in the ‘90s for the stage, three successful video games, and even a prog rock album. Pratchett even writes cinematically-almost all of his adult novels are written without chapters, skipping scene-to-scene just as a movie does. Though Pratchett has been adapted a handful of times for television, most recently with Amazon’s Good Omens (excellent) and BBC America’s The Watch (patchy), this will be the first true big-screen take on a Pratchett book*, which is frankly astonishing when you consider that Sir Terry has been a bestseller since the mid-‘80s, with a series of accessible and cinematic comic fantasy hits, most of which would lend themselves to the screen.

Mort by Terry Pratchett

release of The Amazing Maurice, a feature length adaptation of Terry Pratchett’s acclaimed 2001 YA novel.















Mort by Terry Pratchett