EXCLUSIVE: While screenwriter Jane Goldman and director Matthew Vaughn are expected to return for the sequel to X-Men: First Class, Goldman is in talks with 20th Century Fox on another priority project with a major director. She’ll adapt Miss Peregrine’s Home For Peculiar Children, the Ransom Riggs novel that Chernin Entertainment is producing, and Tim Burton is circling to direct.
Goldman most recently adapted The Woman In Black, the CBS Films thriller that stars Daniel Radcliffe. In Miss Peregine’s Home For Peculiar Children, Jacob is a 16-year-old whose childhood was filled with stories his grandfather told him about an orphanage for unusual children. Among the residents: a girl who could hold fire in her hands, another whose feet never touched the ground, and twins who communicated without speaking. When his beloved grandfather dies unexpectedly but leaves a message behind for his grandson, the teen heads off to his grandfather’s home on an isolated island off Wales. There he discovers the abandoned remains of Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children. It is in great disrepair and as Jacob explores its bedrooms and hallways, he can see the children were more than peculiar, they might have been there because they were dangerous. And he can’t shake the feeling they are still lurking around. Peter Chernin, Dylan Clark and Jenno Topping are producing. Like Burton, Goldman is repped by WME and UK-based Independent.







She’s hot!
Literally the same words came out of my mouth as I clicked to see the comments.
That is spectacularly irrelevant. Or should we be reflexively rating the male writers on doability too?
@MissMediaJunkie – Thank you for asking that.
It’s relevant to me! And you should absolutely rate male writers on doability if you like. I encourage it!
Trying to rate writers on a scale of doability is… good luck. And i am a writer.
My interest in this film [which was already high] has just doubled.
Glad they hired a talented writer. It’s nice she’s a woman. I hear they’re very smart and innovative. Maybe Hollywood would hire more? Nah…
Only if they’re as hot as her….
I love all of the movies she has a hand in- X-Men: First Class, Kick-Ass and Stardust were all mind-blowing!
Why can’t precocious children who discover fantasy worlds ever be AMERICAN? Or ASIAN, or…anything other than British. Not that there’s anything wrong with Brit kids, but by now it’s such a cliche.
Why do these stories always have to be set in the UK? Tim Burton’s exhibit at MOMA was huge, here; there’s plenty of angsty, quirky fantasy and horror nerds in the States that would love a homegrown tale!
Cause maybe those thousands of years Britain has been around kind of adds to the place. Unlike a country that’s be around a few hundred?
In the book the main character is American, his family is Jewish and lives in Florida.
Protagonist is from the US. His grandpa is from Poland. Peculiars come from all over the world. Crack open the book before you make statements like that.
I agree wholeheartedly. As a Brit I’m sick and tired of seeing my cultural heritage depicted accurately by Hollywood. What happened to the good old days when Peter Pan was American? And Winnie the Pooh would just not be the same with a British accent. Its so unfair on America that you don’t see any examples of your own culture on screen any more.
She’s the wife of UK chat show host Jonathon Ross
Yep, she’s proving to be an extremely talented scribe. I hope that she continues to challenge herself.
I love her even more that she’s married to the Broadcasting God Jonathan Ross. He puts Letterman, O’Brien et al to shame.
Not many women can pull off that “look at my wacky hair colour!” bit, but goodness, she sure can. Definitely hot.
Now what’s this about a movie?