Mick C. Wrote:Okay, here's how it's played:
1) Name 1 film adaptation which is worse than the source material (novel, play, graphic novel, video game, tv series - remakes of other movies don't count).
Quote:2) Name 1 film adaptation that is as good as the source material - i.e., both the source and film are great in their own right.Moby Dick, the 1956 version scripted by Ray Bradbury.
Quote:3) Name 1 film adaptation that is actually superior to the source material.The first version of "The Day the Earth Stood Still". While Harry Bates' "Farewell to the Master" has its points, he was a much better editor than writer.
Quote:You can't name a film that has already been named. Discussion is encouraged.Kind of a given.
I'll start off:
1) The Keep (naturally).
Quote:2) A Clockwork OrangeI might kindly disagree, here, but you're right. Both works are great in different ways. But I really hated the ending of the movie, the book is much better there especially if you read the final chapter that was left out of the US version. It used to be on-line, now I can't find it, I'll check the stack of old hard disks, I hope I saved it.
Quote:3) The Parallax View - boring mish-mash of a novel, pretty interesting paranoid conspiracy film.neither read nor viewed either -- not my genre, and I have only so much lifespan
Quote:I do crossword puzzles with a pen.
Pick up your #2 pencils and begin.
Mick C. Wrote:Okay, here's how it's played:
1) Name 1 film adaptation which is worse than the source material (novel, play, graphic novel, video game, tv series - remakes of other movies don't count).
2) Name 1 film adaptation that is as good as the source material - i.e., both the source and film are great in their own right.
3) Name 1 film adaptation that is actually superior to the source material.
You can't name a film that has already been named. Discussion is encouraged. .
mad4tunes Wrote:Well, Mick, since you didn't limit it to SF/fantasy/horror...I can dig with you there, Tunes. The book was good, the first movie sucked, the new version was almost OK (but not quite -- Depp still needs to learn how to act).
1) Worse than the source material:
"Willy Wonka And the Chocolate Factory"...the Roald Dahl novel was a LOT more interesting. I do admit a sneaking regard for the Johnny Depp version (non-musical) version.
Quote:2) As good as the source material:Fritz Leiber repeatedly told me to read the original material. I still haven't.
"The Maltese Falcon"...John Huston managed to catch the ambiance of Dashiell Hammett's Sam Space perfectly in this movie...and kept it as tight and edgy as the novel.
Quote:3) Better than the source material:Opposite for me. (I really can't stand Tom Hanks in anything). The only saving grace of the movie was Robin Wright (formerly the Princess Bride). Groom's sequel was a fun dig at the movie, you'll probably find it on the remainder tables if they haven't sent it to landfill yet.
Don't laugh..."Forrest Gump". Eric Roth's screenplay takes Winston Groom's Forrest Gump and him into Everyman and makes for a great parable. The shooting of the movie was also much more dynamic than the original novel. The Gump in the novels is a redneck racist, critically flawed, and left little to like (at least for me).
Quote:JohnTFS...I agree with you up to a point about Daredevil...but I thought it was worth the watch just to see Jennifer Garner in the leather bustier.I guess someday I'll have to watch Daredevil (I've seen bits while La Esposa was flipping channels, wasn't impressed, Affleck's best work happens when Kevin Smith directs [Dogma, Jersey Girl -- and I hate New Jersey, I've been stuck here too damned long]) and I haven't watched more than the trailers for Electra. I think a combo pack with both is ten bucks at Walmart, and there lies the rub -- beer or bad movies?
wdg3rd Wrote:Anything even loosely based on a Heinlein work. Starship Troopers, The Puppet Masters, and the ST:TOS episodes The Trouble with Tribbles and Operation Annhilate.
wdg3rd Wrote:Moby Dick, the 1956 version scripted by Ray Bradbury.
wdg3rd Wrote:The first version of "The Day the Earth Stood Still". While Harry Bates' "Farewell to the Master" has its points, he was a much better editor than writer.
wdg3rd Wrote:Kind of a given.I might kindly disagree, here, but you're right. Both works are great in different ways. But I really hated the ending of the movie, the book is much better there especially if you read the final chapter that was left out of the US version. It used to be on-line, now I can't find it, I'll check the stack of old hard disks, I hope I saved it.
mad4tunes Wrote:1) Worse than the source material:
"Willy Wonka And the Chocolate Factory"...the Roald Dahl novel was a LOT more interesting. I do admit a sneaking regard for the Johnny Depp version (non-musical) version..
mad4tunes Wrote:2) As good as the source material:
"The Maltese Falcon"...John Huston managed to catch the ambiance of Dashiell Hammett's Sam Space perfectly in this movie...and kept it as tight and edgy as the novel..
mad4tunes Wrote:3) Better than the source material:
Don't laugh..."Forrest Gump". Eric Roth's screenplay takes Winston Groom's Forrest Gump and him into Everyman and makes for a great parable. The shooting of the movie was also much more dynamic than the original novel. The Gump in the novels is a redneck racist, critically flawed, and left little to like (at least for me)..
mad4tunes Wrote:JohnTFS...I agree with you up to a point about Daredevil...but I thought it was worth the watch just to see Jennifer Garner in the leather bustier.
wdg3rd Wrote:Fritz Leiber repeatedly told me to read the original material. I still haven't.
Wapitikev Wrote:1. X-Men 3: The Last Stand. By far the worst butchering of a comic book storyline that the world has ever been subjected to. The Dark Phoenix Saga (which won awards in the 70s) was raped, flayed and disemboweled by Brett Ratner. He botched it even worse than Michael Mann did on The Keep. It makes me physically ill that he has worked with Beacon in the past and has even an inkling of a chance to become the Director for the Repairman Jack movie.
2. Daredevil: Director's Cut. The theatrical release was over 1/2 hour shorter than the director's cut due to blatant studio interference in the editing process that overruled the 1st-time director's decisions. The studio even had them shoot and add a meaningless love-scene between Garner and Affleck for the theatrical release. The Director's cut keeps their feelings unrequited and adds 1/2 hour of story (read as character development) which actually gives the movie some meaning (we even catch a glimpse of Matt Murdoch's mother).
3. There are so few...Lord of the Rings Special Extended Editions is the one that comes immediately to mind...there was minor tinkering with the story (eg: the Ents not agreeing to go to war at the Entmoot, no scouring of the Shire, Saruman dying in the wrong place, etc.) but overall it was a singularly amazing adaptation of a work that most thought to be unfilmable.
-Wapitikev