'I've been reading alot of scripts lately...it's a lot cheaper than going to the movies.' -Troy McClure
First, there was the Ghost World graphic novel (to be fair, probably the Ghost World serialised story in Eightball was first, but...) then came the moderately successful film from Terry Zwigoff (starring future superstar Scarlett Johannson and rapidly declining star Thora Birch), and at last came this book edition of the screenplay of the movie of the comic. While this third 'chapter' in the Ghost World saga may seem superfluous and merely published as a way to further milk the collection-obsessed comic audience, it does manage to go a good way beyond that.
The bulk of this book is, indeed, the blue-paged screenplay for the film. That alone offers a deeper glimpse into the movie, with scenes and lines which didn't make it to the final cut as well as insight into intent behind different scenes which did. Beyond that there are two introductions, one by Zwigoff and one by project originator Daniel Clowes, a brand-new mini-strip starring the two female protagonists, colour production photos and illustrations, and a full-colour storyboarding of (what appears to be just one of several of) the opening sequence of the movie. After the script is another full-colour section of annotations to the script, including more illustrations and stills, as well as a brief synopsis of why and how they got Sophie Crumb (daughter of underground comix godfather Robert Crumb) to do Enid Coleslaw's sketchbook images. There's even a two-page listing of the cast and crew. It's all wrapped in a newly-illustrated (by Clowes) jacket depicting the filmic representations of his comic creations.
I've seen a good number of filmbooks and illustrated screenplays, and they all could learn something about presentation from this little book. If you're a fan of either incarnation of Ghost World, this is certainly a book for you.