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Thread: film vs Book

  1. #1
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    film vs Book

    why is it that whenever a book you've read is made into a movie, you always feel like it should have been different. In one film the main character is blond where in my mind it should have been brown or the city the character lives in is different from what i thought. I know that everyone who reads a book gets something different out of it, but up untill now i have never seen a film of which i thought that it was better than the book it was made from. Does anyone know a film that is better than the book?
    "If ignorance is bliss, you must be orgasmic"

  2. #2
    Super papayahed's Avatar
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    Nope i can't think of one. Although I tried to read the short story The langoliers by Stephen King and couldn't get through it, then I saw the movie and it made me want to go back and read the book. Does that count? Probably not.
    Do, or do not. There is no try. - Yoda


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    Lazy Like A Cat Pickles's Avatar
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    Also Stephen King, I thought "The Dead Zone" was a better as a movie, but that could just be Christopher Walken's acting. He's a scary guy isn't he?
    Pickles

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    an innate contradiction verybaddmom's Avatar
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    its funny, i didnt think there was ONE Stephen King movie that was better than the book. there were a couple that were close (green mile comes to mind) but really for all the hype over say....The Shining, well it was a great movie, but the book takes it so much deeper.
    Then we sat on the edge of the earth, with our feet dangling over the side, and marvelled that we had found each other.

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    What is so strange is that your perception of the film depends on wether you've read the book before seeing the film. when you've read the book first, the film will likely disappoint you because you already have a perception of the story in your mind. But when you've seen the film first you don't feel disappointed after reading the book because the book only adds to the perception of the film. but, in my idea, you read the book differently once you've already seen the film because you make your characters look (in your mind) as you've seen them on tv. Am I the only one that has this experience or do you have that too?
    "If ignorance is bliss, you must be orgasmic"

  6. #6
    an innate contradiction verybaddmom's Avatar
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    oh no, you are absolutely right. i think once you have seen a film you will always read the book and visualize the characters as the actors that played them. i dont necessarily think that's a good thing, as every actor brings to the role hints of their old roles and their reputations. that is why i prefer to read the book first and then be dissapointed with the movie later. i get to use the author's descriptions to build the imagery and the characters have only the backgrounds that they are given by the author.
    Then we sat on the edge of the earth, with our feet dangling over the side, and marvelled that we had found each other.

  7. #7
    Noli nocere Edzabeen's Avatar
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    I've read an article about this and it said that there are three ways to create a movie by a book:
    1) cinematographic adaption (sounds terrible to me maybe you know a beeter expression) where the movie is created strictly by the book. I think Harry Potter movies belong here. That leaves no freedom for director but the fans are contended and they can just argue why some scenes were cut or so. In my opinion you can't create a movie better than book in such a way becouse you're too limited.
    2) adapting the story of the book for the idea of director who can know express his own view to the book. I think this is the best way but it might leave you unhappy with the result. I thinkk the LOTR movies would fit here although I think that they are actually somewhere between the first and the second way.
    3) Just the idea of the book. In this kind of movies you can hardly recognize the book becouse the story and idea of the book has been greatly altered. But I can't imagine a proper example right now.
    As speaking for the second way- it's just a version about the book, the way director sees it and you must accept that he possibliy thinks different from you becouse he has experienced other things in his life and he perceives the story differen't. This might be the way you can create a movie better than a book. But I must admit that I don't know such movie. It is possible that I've even seen one but haven't read the book to compare or (and that is the most usual thing) I don't even know that a movie is taken by a book.
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    Super papayahed's Avatar
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    Did I ever mention my disgust at casting robert mitchum as Pug Henry in The Winds of War???? (Probably once or twice) Totally ruined my whole perception of the book.
    Do, or do not. There is no try. - Yoda


  9. #9
    Lazy Like A Cat Pickles's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Edzabeen
    I've read an article about this and it said that there are three ways to create a movie by a book:
    1) cinematographic adaption (sounds terrible to me maybe you know a better expression) where the movie is created strictly by the book. I think Harry Potter movies belong here. .........
    2) adapting the story of the book for the idea of director who can know express his own view to the book. I think this is the best way but it might leave you unhappy with the result. I thinkk the LOTR movies would fit here although I think that they are actually somewhere between the first and the second way.
    3) Just the idea of the book. In this kind of movies you can hardly recognize the book becouse the story and idea of the book has been greatly altered. But I can't imagine a proper example right now......
    Cinematographic adaption, IMHO, impossible, but the Harry Potter movies do do a nice job.

    Adapting the story of the book , LOTR, loved the first, hated the second.
    third was nice, but I didn't exactly love it. I'm a Tolkien freak so it was
    stacked odds I'd be unhappy about something.

    Just the idea of the book, Frankenstien ( 1931 ) the film makers cranked out a very nice product, but the story doesn't really resemble Mary Shelley's work at all.


    *** I'm going to rent Frankenstien, pop some corn and turn out all the lights... Who wants to come over and watch it with me?*****
    Last edited by Pickles; 08-20-2004 at 03:12 PM.
    Pickles

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    I think Apocalyps now is a good example of a plot taken from a book and made into a film in a different setting. But the story of the book is certainly recognisable, so it's actually in between one and three on edzabeen's list. quite strange, because point one and three seem to oppose each other but it is the same story really, only different time and different place
    "If ignorance is bliss, you must be orgasmic"

  11. #11
    Daydream Believer Kiwi Shelf's Avatar
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    I always read the book first because I like using my imagination more than being told what to think. The good thing about reading is that you can take the books off in new directions just by imagining what a town looks like or how a person walks. In a movie, all of that is set out for you. I often don't read the book after seeing the movie because I find it takes the fun out of it...
    "Hear and you forget; see and you remember; do and you understand."

  12. #12
    Lovely Marauder Gadget Girl's Avatar
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    I like reading the book much better 'cuz if you wanna watch a movie based on a novel and you haven't read it, sometimes you'll just confuse yourself saying, 'who is that man in the grey hat? What's his role really? Did she drink a tea with him or what?' and some other questions that will make you understand the movie more. Also, some movies make the story from the book better than the original, so you are lucky if they did the movie better and you do know what is going on.

    But really, I like to read the book first, so that I won't be wondering too much.
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    Stumbled across this thread and instantly felt all the anger and frustration felt upon seeing the film "Eragon"

    The Harry Potter films, I agree, stuck very nicely to the book. Up until the Half Blood Prince anyway. Such a let down on the whole. Half the story points are missing and the last few chapters of the book were cut out entirely. It is the first Harry Potter film that made me angry.
    I was thinking as the release date for Half Blood Prince drew near, how close the films always came to the book. Even the fact that sentences from the book were literally used at the right time in the films. If you watch one of the films and then read the book, you can even imagine that you are watching the film.
    - When I read, it is like watching a film anyway. I often forget that I am reading at all and seem to be watching it happen. I am sure I am not the only one. Anyway...

    I love to read and though there are cases when I seen the film and did not read the book, generally it is the other way around. I would sooner not see a film when I can simply read the book - which is always better in my opinion.

    I have NEVER seen a film better than the book. Films will always miss something that was vital in the plot, or skim over minor details to save time on the film, details that made all the difference. The worst example of a book turned to film in my opinion would be ERAGON

    WHAT THE HELL!!!! - That film deviated so far from the book, they won't even be able to make the second book into a film. I wouldn't be surprised if they wait ten years until everyone forgot the film and remake it how it was supposed to be done. That film ...
    Anyway... In the film (I can't remember the name because the film got me so mad I ripped the book up. I wanted to slap Christopher Paolini for selling the rights and allowing that P.O.S film to be released. Probably would have if I knew him...) - Two creatures that were sent to kill Eragon. In the book, those same two creatures were alive at the end of book 2, "Eldest". Yet in the film Eragon, they were killed fairly early on. What the...!!!

    In the case of Stephen King. I find I can easily read and enjoy some of his books and others I cant. Even if I watch the film version, I can still fail to get into some of his books. The worst of that was The Tommy Knockers - I couldn't get into that book at all. Where as Cell and Needless Things are two of my favourite books and still keep them close at hand wherever I go, just in case I decide to read one again.

    Lastly, I will comment on the "Da Vinci Code" followed by "Angels and Demons"
    - I read both books, but didn't watch the film of "The Da Vinci Code." I am a fan of Tom Hanks, but I enjoyed the book and didn't want the image in my head destroyed. I knew that Robert Langdon was played by Tom Hanks and the description of Robert in the book was nothing like Tom Hanks. In my opinion.
    When the film Angels and Demons was released I seen highlights and decided once again to read the book and not watch the film. The book however had set my imagination rolling and I was curious how the film would manage some of the imagery presented in the book. So I did the unthinkable.
    I watched the film.
    - In short, I hated the film.

    Though this thread didn't really need a biased essay on the matter. I just wanted to vent a very small amount of the built up anger and frustration created by watching films made from books I have read. With the exception of the Harry Potter films (except Half Blood Prince, which as I said; total let down, and I expect Deathly Hallows will be also - considering they are doing it in 2 parts...) ALL films that are made from books are major let downs. Films seem to be for people too lazy to read, and as punishment, they get a crappier story for their laziness. Probably a fair punishment considering some of the stuff people have missed out on by not reading the book and watching the film only.
    However, readers, myself included, still watch the films. We are equally punished for it. We are punished with disappointment. In fact, we are probably punished more by the let down. Probably for being cheeky and greedy in wanting a seconds.

    Finally verdict. - Books are Better, so in film vs book, book wins.
    Sentence. - Disappointment and Let down.

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    If I really like a book, I don't go see the movie, usually.

    But then big things like Lord of the Rings, Narnia they are big screen worthy for the most part, although there were bits and pieces that need to be left out for the sake of time as long as it does not compromise the story or is not so contrived I can live with it.

    ~L
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    Registered User Manchegan's Avatar
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    I think movies and books have different jobs. They each have different strong points. Books give better characterization and stronger revelations and internal conflict, but movies create better mood with music and visuals.

    I've mentioned this elsewhere, but Watchmen is better as a movie than a book. The author's ending was ridiculous, but the director fixed it, making all the same points, but in a better way.
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