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WARREN ELLIS LTD Posts

end of dec25

It is December 20 and I am having to admit today that I am tapped out for 2025. I’ll turn this back on around January 2.

I have read 52 books this year, it seems, so I’ll close this by listing some of the ones I liked best. If you’re still reading this, then happy new year. I hope it’s a good and peaceful one.

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18dec25

OPERATIONS: I have to spend all day buried in this one job until it’s as done as I can get it.
STATUS: inbox 160.
READING: DERRIDA: A VERY SHORT INTRODUCTION, Simon Glendinning
LISTENING:


THINKING ABOUT: this headline I just saw on The Guardian: “Boys to learn difference between porn and real life to tackle misogyny in England’s schools”

MISSION CONTROL: I can be contacted via the Cheng Caplan Company or Inkwell Management. Link in masthead to join my free newsletter.

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NUREMBERG (2025)

I conceived of the recent CONCLAVE as a kind of classical filmmaking that doesn’t really happen much any more. And now here’s NUREMBERG.

Hermann Goring and the rest of the surviving Nazi leadership are on trial at Nuremberg for crimes against humanity. You know the story. Army psychiatrist Doug Kelley is charged with keeping them alive until the trial, and forms a particular bond with Goring.

The performances are interesting. Russell Crowe as Goring is twinkling and avuncular. Rami Malek as Kelley is quick and a little twitchy. At the top of the film, Kelley is shown Goring’s stash of “heart pills”, pops and crunches one, proclaims them to be codeine and smiles “I’m a fan.” Goring and Kelley are both showy egomaniacs, is the thing – but Goring has achieved something in his life and Kelley, in his mid thirties and already starting to show grey hair (Malek is actually 44), hasn’t. Michael Shannon, as Justice Jackson, the man who pressed for trials rather than summary execution and achieved this by blackmailing Pope Pius, finds a sort of man-out-of-time Lincolnesque gravitas while also being hobbled by ego and wants. Richard E Grant does a stately turn, and Steven Pacey from BLAKES 7 in my childhood shows up as George Marshall.

There’s a nice set of double bookends to the film, and a message-y coda that feels a little bit nailed on but is nonetheless handily done. It’s generally a solid, well-written piece of work, almost a chamber piece – I suspect there are barely more than a dozen speaking roles. Crowe and Malek have to carry the majority of the film, and they’re very watchable: two vain, insidious charmers: but only one is comfortable in his own skin.

Seen via the WGA FYC app.

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17dec25

Started scripting before 11am. I need to drive this new job off my desk by Friday, and I already had a ton of other things I need to do around the house today. I’ve got a dozen research tabs open while I write. Which I’m about to switch over to Perplexity because Google AI summaries are really getting in the way now and are almost uniformly useless. All I need is a search engine that just searches and provides links and citations. I suspect there’s now probably grounds for the argument that 2025 was the last year of the internet.

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NINE BELLS clothes hangers

So I just took delivery of twenty clothes hangers.

A couple of years ago, I had to make some dietary changes due to having entered the “age-related food intolerances” era of life. Basically, my genetic heritage says that I am nearly dead, and therefore my body believes I no longer need to digest lactose or gluten properly and should instead be preparing to leave the village and die in a ditch in the wilderness so as not to be a further burden on the community.

(The real hack here was buying a stack of unbreakable bowls that I can just throw leaves and protein and nuts into and stir with olive oil and balsamic vinegar. We refer to these as “the sadness bowls” in our house, as in “yes, I am having a sadness bowl for my lunch again.” These bowls are also for the berries, almonds and honey I have for breakfast.)

(Also worth noting that I made a few further adjustments after reading ULTRA PROCESSED PEOPLE)

Said dietary changes have led to me losing around four inches off my waist over a couple of years, which I wasn’t expecting. This was a good excuse to buy new clothes, as I love clothes. I am, however, bad at throwing clothes out, and there’s a voice in the back of my head that demands Cornish pasties and thinks that one day a perfect gluten intolerance tablet will be invented that will allow me to go face down in a six foot pile of them so I should probably keep the baggy jeans.

Therefore I now own more clothes than I have since my thirties. So many more, in fact, that I’ve had to order a lot of clothes hangars, each one of which will have to hang three garments as I tend to buy clothes as capsules, a few of which capsules have a matching shoe so oh shit I just realised I need a shoe rack too.

Accidental weight loss turns out to be expensive and somehow also space-consuming.

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16dec25

Forgot to put my alarm on. Woke up to an unexpected and large new job request in email that’s going to rewire the next few days, and I need to be inside that document right now if my schedule isn’t going to collapse a week before Xmas.

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NINE BELLS the art life

While it should always be borne in mind that the art life was a lot easier for David Lynch because he had a staff, his description of the art life resonates with me still: “You drink coffee, you smoke cigarettes, and you paint, and that’s it.” I really need to quit or at least cut down on the smokes again – I can’t get vaping to work for me – and as I write this just after noon, I’m on my fourth espresso of the day.

That said: there is little better than standing off from a piece of work, with a cup of coffee, and thinking about it, or going outside and lighting up and thinking about what you’ve just done or what you’re going to do next. Without interruption. That moment where it’s just you and what you’re making. The thing that didn’t exist before you put it down, and what it makes you think about and around it. There is a moment where it’s both what’s here and what’s next.

And you want that without interruption. No devices making noise. Nobody else around. Because the awful thing about that particular art life is that you do it alone. And that’s why Lynch’s art life was a privilege: he had people to create that cone of silence around him, to answer the door and wrangle family and feed the cats and pick up the phone and all the other things that intrude on the creative space. Real life, basically.

The art life is a nice place to visit.

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telemetry 15dec25

Watched two episodes of LANDMAN, which were actually pretty good. I have a lot of time for Taylor Sheridan. YELLOWSTONE never quite landed with me, though I appreciate its craft and also that a part finally fits Kelly Reilly’s weird energy, but LANDMAN hits right for me, and the scripting is fascinating. Also seeing Colm Feore climbing inside a new skin was nice.

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CODEX 1962, Sjon

He heard air-raid sirens wailing in the cities – those human fiends made a worse racket than the devil himself – but now they would get a taste of some real doomsday music.

Well, that was just fucking strange.

It’s hard to describe without blowing the experience for someone else. It’s about myths and legends, about mythologising, about fairytales and bedtime stories. The structure is a take on the Golem story, beginning during the Second World War, as an apparent alchemist is smuggled across Europe towards Iceland, carrying the raw clay of the thing that will change the world. And what a world. Time is murdered. Ghosts hang out on street corners and show you their death wounds.

the man in the bed gave the impression of being a half-mad skeleton who’d wrapped himself in skin for the sake of appearances

It’s a funny book, I have to say. Which is a useful anchor in what is otherwise a mad kaleidoscope of a thing, a spin of lies and grief and insanity and the supernatural. The third section massively reframes the first two parts and you find out what the book is really (mostly, kind of) about, and it’s both desperately sad and wonderfully soaring.

It is, as much as anything, a performance – Sjon showing what he can do when he tosses the rulebook and mixes styles and text formats and literary antecedents in an attempt to gather up Story (or perhaps fairy story) as a whole, and in fact to gather his own life as a whole, reaching across sixty years (or millennia) to snatch up every last scrap and stuff it in.

I thought it was amazing, and it held me to the end.

(One caveat: a quarter of the way in, there’s a short rape scene that threw me out of the book for a few days.)

CODEX 1962, Sjon (UK(US+)

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