Originally posted by mikoyan29
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
The Best and Worst Novel/Movie Adaptation
Collapse
X
-
Not much is similar between the book and the movie. There's bugs, there's a united government...yea, that's it. Even the sex of some characters changed. And have you ever seen the deleted love scenes?Violence has resolved more conflicts than anything else. The contrary opinion that violence doesn't solve anything is merely wishful thinking at its worst. - Starship Troopers
-
David Tennant's Hamlet is really quite brilliant and is modern throughout. Also, the stage adaptation of Much Ado About Nothing with David Tennant & Catherine Tate. I don't mind Shakespearan English & modern settings, but that's just me.Originally posted by tropicsgoddess View PostThe Romeo and Juliet with Claire Danes was the worst...seeing people in modern (1998 modern) day clothes and such while talking in Medieval or Shakespearean English was just ridiculous, IMO.
Oh Holy Trinity, the Goddess Caffeine'Na, the Great Cowthulhu, & The Doctor, Who Art in Tardis, give me strength. Moo. Moo. Java. Timey Wimey
Avatar says: DAVID TENNANT More Evidence God is a Woman
Comment
-
I loved the book. I think if I hadn't read it first, I'd enjoy the silliness of the movie more. Just ruined everything for me. Oh and Desperation by Stephen King. The movie just didn't have the spark the book did.Originally posted by Greenday View PostNot much is similar between the book and the movie. There's bugs, there's a united government...yea, that's it. Even the sex of some characters changed. And have you ever seen the deleted love scenes?
Can't think of the best one though.
Comment
-
Agreed.Originally posted by tropicsgoddess View PostThe Romeo and Juliet with Claire Danes was the worst...seeing people in modern (1998 modern) day clothes and such while talking in Medieval or Shakespearean English was just ridiculous, IMO.
And then we Aussies had to try and do the exact same thing....except with Macbeth. (ETA, YES that's Sam Worthington from Avatar
)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macbeth_(2006_film)
Comment
-
I can agree with this only because I really didn't like the book. IMHO, Tom Clancy writes to read his own words. There was so much going in that book that had seemingly no relevance at all until the end of the book. It's as if there was some sort of psychic phenomenon being experienced or he really wanted us to believe the "oh hey, we just happened to have scavenged this piece off of this other submarine just in case we have another one go down and we need it.Originally posted by mikoyan29 View PostBest Adaptation is a tough one for me...but I'll have to say that Hunt for Red October was one of the better ones. Yes they changed the ending but the ending made a good movie ending.
As for worst adaptations? It's so hard to say. I've got MAJOR complaints about the adaptions from the Jurassic Park series, the Harry Potter series, and just about every Stephen King book ever made into a movie.Some People Are Alive Only Because It's Illegal To Kill Them.
Comment
-
I am glad it was heavily updated to become your bad adaptation, England could/would suffer from fall out of a nuclear strike in mainland Europe, at the time of writing this was unkonwn.Originally posted by Hyena Dandy View PostBest adaptation, to me, is also my favorite movie. "American Psycho"
Worst, again to me, is "V for Vendetta"
Not that it's a bad movie, it's just a bad ADAPTATION.
Also dirty bombs 9/11 and all sorts of modern forms of terrorism would have seemed far fetched if written about then, even if true now.
Hijackers had a different end goal, 'visionary' as he is, I'm not sure anyone would buy 9/11 as a plot device to a book or movie back in the early 80's, let alone V for Vendetta.
I can not recall much from the original and what I can seems stupid.
Facist leader is in love with his all powerful AI and killed by the wife/widow of I can't remember who.
The movie rewrite has a much more believable rise to power of a facist and the paranoia of a state under biological attack (from it's own future government no less)
Yes his work normally gets mangled along the way, but in this case, it was a good idea but little outside of the title and the look of V should have migrated to the silver screen.
Having Steven Fry's character be the one Evey ends up with in the interim instead of that random guy, much better IMO.
Comment

Comment