|
Is Labyrinth based on a novel?
Or did the book come out after the movie? Then what is that book that Sarah is holding in the beginning of the movie?
Labyrinth is an original story created from the combined efforts of a myriad of people. Jim Henson came up with the basic concept. Brian Froud brought that concept to physical form in his drawings, and Terry Jones contributed to the screenplay. I say contributed because it appears that his efforts much more closely resemble The Goblins of Labyrinth than Labyrinth as we've seen on film. From what I have been able to gather, Henson used only parts of Jones' orignal ideas, possibly because they dealt more with goblins than with Sarah.
Laura Phillips, I'm guessing, polished up the screenplay. She is credited on the early screenplay, which is very different from the finished movie as we know it, and special thanks is given to her in the end credits of the film.
Jim Henson must have altered the direction of Labyrinth many times before it evolved into the movie that it is today. In Starlog 109, he states that an early story idea involved a king and queen who had to rescue their baby from an enchantment. This version he felt was too similar to the movie "Legend" and the course of Labyrinth was altered again.
As far as I have been able to piece together YES to all of the above! Although it would appear that Terry Jones spent far more time going on about goblins (see below The Goblins of Labyrinth reprinted as The Goblin Companion). The script as we would recognize it was credited to Laura Phillips and Terry Jones - Story by Dennis Lee. (See THINKLABYRINTH! for the early script).
There aren't really tons of differences, just some interesting ones. It is Smith's novel where we hear of Jeremy (Sarah's mother's boyfriend who gave Sarah the music box), Sir Didymus being much larger, Jareth being a complete and total twat, etc. Some of the coolest differences are that junklady who tries to persuade Sarah to stay in her "room" is actually Jareth in disguise, and Sarah first chooses the doorknocker on the left where there is a field of laughing flowers that start her laughing until she is unable to move. Ludo has to rescue her, then they take the right door knocker. There is also some conversation between some lech and Sarah in the ballroom scene.
Ebay regularly has people auctioning them. Intergalactic Trading Company still has copies. They are always auctioning them on Ebay, starting at $5-7 US, but you can go direct and not have to bid the price up ridiculously high!
If you just want to read it online, Stephanie Massick typed up the whole book at The Depths of the Crystal but it seems she's taken down her page. Fortunately Walter Pullen of THINKLABYRINTH! created a text version of Stephanie's work. Because of this, I've duplicated Stephanie's effors here at The Goblins' Library.
I have a movie poster that says something like "Novel courtesy of Henry Holt and Co." Now, they did publish the American edition of the A.C.H. Smith novel (as well as other Labyrinth books). However, I believe that in Britain, the book was published by Virgin. I'm at the point where I'm going to send a nice little letter to HH&Co. to see if they had anything to do with the little red book, if it was just a prop, and if I can get a copy - even if the damn thing is completely blank inside!
There's also a lot of confusion over Terry Jones' and Brian Froud's book The Goblins of Labyrinth (published by our friends at Henry Holt & Co). It went out of print a long time ago, and was reprinted in 1996 as The Goblin Companion: A Field Guide to Goblins by Turner Publishing Inc. in the US, by Pavilion Books in the UK. This edition also went out of print, but was re-issued in 1998 by Barnes and Noble. Neither reprint reproduces Froud's amazing color centerfolds but at least the Barnes and Noble version has the full size dimensions of The Goblins of Labyrinth (meaning Turner's size was a dinky little 15 cm x 21.5 cm instead of the full 23 cm x 31 cm). Normally I don't nit-pick like this, but when we're talking art books, I get really fussy!
Less confusing, although still confusing are Labyrinth: The Storybook Based on the Movie and Labyrinth: The Photo Album which Intergalactic Trading Co. called a storybook - so don't confuse it with the first one I just mentioned! The storybook is a cute book with cartoons that you'd read to kids. The Photo Album still has a story, but with photos that we adult women can drool over and could never part with, no way, not ever!
Recently, I discovered a little Read-Along Storybook with great photos and 7" 33-1/3 RPM record. (Haven't listened to it yet.)
To sum everything up, I think we can safely say:
Known variations: (chronologically as best I can guess)
|
![]() |
Go to the Photo Album now. Go to the Storybook now. Go to the Read-Along Storybook now. Go to the Goblins of Labyrinth now. Go to the Goblin Companion now. Return to the library's entrance. |