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When Billy forgets to follow specific instructions for care of his strange new pet, Gizmo, beastly gremlins pop up to wreak havoc on the town.Tags
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I picked up these novelizations because I had heard that the author, writing directly from the screenplays without seeing the movie, just made up and filled a lot of details regarding the mogwai, gremlins, their dialogue and thoughts, and their background. And that it was absolutely bonkers.
While that is all true to a degree, there is certainly not nearly as much of that as I was led to believe, nor hoped was there. It is a pretty interesting take though. There's also a scene with the cops later on poking holes in the three rules that reminded me a lot of a scene from the Masters of Horror entry, 'Deer Woman' many many years later.
Besides the alien origins and off the wall background, the main differences between this and the movie we show more hopefully all love is one of tone. Its darker and more serious than the film, with Gipes' style feeling a little like the pulp detective noir. The characters are less wholesome and lovable than in the movie, the romantic subplot is a lot more subdued, and there's another subplot involving Mrs. Deagle trying to sell off most of town to a chemical company that ends up being kind of unimportant and unrelated to anything else. I did really like the additional background and lost militaristic dreams of Billy's mother, and the bit of a payoff for the bathroom buddy near the end.
I would likely have given this an even higher rating if there was more gonzo mogwai/gremlin/mogturmen background. Worth a read if you find it cheap, don't go out of your way for a collector's priced copy though. show less
While that is all true to a degree, there is certainly not nearly as much of that as I was led to believe, nor hoped was there. It is a pretty interesting take though. There's also a scene with the cops later on poking holes in the three rules that reminded me a lot of a scene from the Masters of Horror entry, 'Deer Woman' many many years later.
Besides the alien origins and off the wall background, the main differences between this and the movie we show more hopefully all love is one of tone. Its darker and more serious than the film, with Gipes' style feeling a little like the pulp detective noir. The characters are less wholesome and lovable than in the movie, the romantic subplot is a lot more subdued, and there's another subplot involving Mrs. Deagle trying to sell off most of town to a chemical company that ends up being kind of unimportant and unrelated to anything else. I did really like the additional background and lost militaristic dreams of Billy's mother, and the bit of a payoff for the bathroom buddy near the end.
I would likely have given this an even higher rating if there was more gonzo mogwai/gremlin/mogturmen background. Worth a read if you find it cheap, don't go out of your way for a collector's priced copy though. show less
It might be common knowledge for any fellow Internet junkies, but the novelization of Gremlins takes some “liberties” with the source material. For example, George Gipe decided that the mogwais are from space and were genetically engineered (years before Jurassic Park made that a thing) by an alien named Mogturman. And I guess they were supposed to do something like terraforming? It’s not clear, but none of this makes a difference in the story.
What I didn’t know was that the mogwais/gremlins talk to each other. They have some kind of telepathy thing going on. Stripe actually has a conversation with Gizmo. I mean, it’s not a good conversation (good as in well-written). They talk like robots or stiff Klingons. It does not match show more their behavior or the tone of the story.
It’s the same author of the Back to the Future novelization featured in BF: The Novelization of the Feature Film, so you know there’s going to be some tone shifts and pacing issues. The gremlins don’t hatch until halfway through the book, so you can see Mr. Gipe had word count on his mind. show less
What I didn’t know was that the mogwais/gremlins talk to each other. They have some kind of telepathy thing going on. Stripe actually has a conversation with Gizmo. I mean, it’s not a good conversation (good as in well-written). They talk like robots or stiff Klingons. It does not match show more their behavior or the tone of the story.
It’s the same author of the Back to the Future novelization featured in BF: The Novelization of the Feature Film, so you know there’s going to be some tone shifts and pacing issues. The gremlins don’t hatch until halfway through the book, so you can see Mr. Gipe had word count on his mind. show less
This is an incredibly well-written movie novelization. The movie pales beside it. I adored this book as a kid. I think the writer's a genius.
A fast, fun romp. Some of it is quite believable, some not so much - but it's still a fun read.
Beware giving a dangerous animal that looks like sweetness and light to a teenager! But at least he tried his best to clean up his mess.
Based on the movie.
Beware giving a dangerous animal that looks like sweetness and light to a teenager! But at least he tried his best to clean up his mess.
Based on the movie.
#325 in our old book database. Not rated.
Een vreemdsoortig wezentje van een andere planeet bezorgt de bevolking van een Amerikaans stadje de meest bizarre kerstavond van hun leven.
Jul 31, 2012Dutch
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Author Information
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Series
Belongs to Publisher Series
Work Relationships
Is an adaptation of
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Gremlins
- Original title
- Gremlins
- Original publication date
- 1984-06
- Related movies
- Gremlins (1984 | IMDb)
- Dedication
- Special thanks to those who helped make my job Gremlin free:
Elaine Markson
Kathryn Vought
Dan Ronmanelli
Mike Finnell
Joe Dante
Brad Globe
Goeffrey Brandt
Judy Gitenstein
Ed Sedarbaum
Special thanks to those who helped make my job Gremlin-free:
Elaine Markson
Kathryn Vought
Dan Romanelli
Mike Finnell
Joe Dante
Brad Globe
Geoffrey Brandt - First words
- In his cage tucked in a far corner of the Chinese man's back room, the Mogwai dozed fitfully.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)He did not want to watch as they moved slowly into the darkness and out of his life.
- Original language
- English
Classifications
- Genres
- Fiction and Literature, Horror, Fantasy
- DDC/MDS
- 813.54 — Literature & rhetoric American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999
- LCC
- PZ7 .G43924 .G — Language and Literature Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Juvenile belles lettres
Statistics
- Members
- 402
- Popularity
- 76,507
- Reviews
- 7
- Rating
- (3.10)
- Languages
- 7 — Dutch, English, French, German, Japanese, Spanish, Swedish
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 13
- ASINs
- 7

































































