Subject: Well, in most cases...
Author:
Posted on: 2014-09-02 02:10:00 UTC
I would have to say that I vastly prefer the book, even if I did end up reading it after watching the movie version.
Subject: Well, in most cases...
Author:
Posted on: 2014-09-02 02:10:00 UTC
I would have to say that I vastly prefer the book, even if I did end up reading it after watching the movie version.
Am I the only one who finds myself liking certain movie adaptations better than the source material? For example, with the exception of the third one, I like the Harry Potter series better in movie format.
I know this isn't a popular opinion, but surely I'm not the only one who does this, right?
I would have to say that I vastly prefer the book, even if I did end up reading it after watching the movie version.
I think a lot of the time, for me, it depends on which I experienced first. For instance, I saw the Princess Bride years before I read the book. Of course, they were both written by the same man, so they're pretty close, and both are very good, but I preferred the film's version of Buttercup, and the ending.
On that note, what about movies that are really different from the book, but both are still enjoyable as long as you treat them like separate pieces of work?
--I completely forgot about probably the best drastically different book-to-movie adaptation I've ever seen: How To Train Your Dragon. I read the book years before, and it had its own charm, though it relied a lot on gross humor and goofiness. The movie made a lot of changes (the biggest probably being that they turned the dragons and Vikings into enemies) but they all worked, creating a very different, and in my opinion better, world, story and characters.
And there are others where the book and movie have different good points for different reasons. For example, though I am not an avid Hunger Games fan, there were points where the message was communicated more strongly by the movie (because you finally get to see glimpses of other perspectives besides Katniss', and because a lot of the description in the book of, say, district 12, was rather vague.) But the movie also tends to gloss over a few points that had more ideological impact than action.
I can't think of any examples of movie's I've seen that were good movies from a mediocre book, but I know I've seen a few.
I would make the argument that the film adaptations of both Jaws and the original Jurassic Park are stronger than their original literary sources. It's admittedly been a while since I've read either of the books, but I remember them as being rather lackluster in comparison. Both films tweaked characters, settings, and plot points enough to create a better experience.
I've heard similar things about the film versions of The Godfather and Goldfinger, but as I haven't read those books I can't speak to that with any degree of certainty.
I've read the book and watched the movie - both ages ago, admittedly - and, well, the book was bad (corny, flat characters, not-really-interesting plot) and the movie was meh (because anything with dinosaurs in it can't suck too badly).
I now I'm biased, but I rarely like any adaptation of a book. No Hollywood budget can ever stand up to my imagination. Things might be different if I watched the movie first and hen read the book, but I try to avoid that whenever possible, so it rarely occurs.
The early Harry Potter movies were faithful enough that I liked them a lot, but the later ones cut out too many little details that made the books so fun.
For some movies they end up releasing basically a novelization as a tie-in book. Those usually aren't very good even when the movie is.
The general trend seems to be cross-medium diminishing- have you ever even tried to watch a movie based on a video game?
A somewhat less obvious answer is the James Bond books. They didn't really age well, even though most of the movies did.
In Harry Potter (like you mentioned) I saw the movies before reading the books - and even then, I preferred movie (with some exceptions), since I could see what was going on better.