Subject: Putting in my two pennies' worth.
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Posted on: 2015-12-08 00:12:00 UTC

When I was in graduate school, I was often too busy studying to do any significant reading on major novels and such, so my appreciation of the written word was kind of a mixed bag. When I wasn't studying, though, I was able to find the time to familiarize myself with at least some of my favorite works of literature, such as all seven Harry Potter novels, the original Percy Jackson series, the Hunger Games trilogy, the Warriors series, and unfortunately (thanks to my mom) the Twilight saga. At the same time, though, I missed out on a few other works as well; I still have yet to read the LoTR series in its entirety even though I know the general idea behind most of it, along with the Hobbit novel preceding it - and don't get me started on Animorphs (which I've only read one or two books of), the Guardians of Ga'Hoole (I've only read up to the first three or four books), and the Maze Runner series (which I haven't even touched despite seeing both of the movies currently released).

In light of this, my judgement on how good The Movie is depends on whether or not I know the original source material. If I do, I determine the worth of The Movie depending on whether it's a good adaptation first and foremost, and if I don't, I judge The Movie without reference to the source, unless The Movie is so different from the original subject matter that it could be considered its own story.

This is why I believe that if you play your cards right, The Movie can sometimes be at least as good as The Book, if not better. I believe that there are two key factors: being a good experience for people who don't have the time to read the original source, which movies are generally good at, and attempting to stay faithful to the source itself, which movies are BAD at. Two ways to settle both issues is to make The Movie a work of its own (like the HTTYD movie or The Princess and the Frog as Ix mentioned), and to faithfully adapt every single detail from the source, which is tricky due to the time and budget constraints of most movies but CAN be done (The Twilight saga is sadly one of the rare few that has mostly succeeded in this respect AFAIK). If you try to do both at the same time, the different demands of moviegoers and book fans mean you have to make compromises which can only lead to failure. This isn't limited to adaptations of written works, either - there's a reason The Last Airbender is never brought up within the AtLA fandom, for example.

That being said, I will concede that this isn't necessarily a hard and fast rule, and that sometimes The Movie can still be awesome even if it botches the original book, show, or whatever it's based on. Case in point? Jurassic Park. The first JP film specifically was a horrible adaptation of the original novel, taking out much of the science that made the book such a bestseller and making everybody OOC to the point where you can say Spielberg was practically godmodding. But the film nevertheless became a blockbuster because a) the movie itself had solid writing, pacing, and character dynamics, b) some of the changes actually made the story better instead of worse, and c) the dinosaurs look awesome. I can say with confidence that I love both the first JP movie and the original novel equally, which is something I can say for very few Movies and Sources in general.

JP is, unfortunately, a bit of an exception to the general rule, but while it shouldn't be taken as the exception that PROVES the rule, it's a good guide to how a Movie can take the original source and IMPROVE upon it rather than tarnishing it. Alas, such a phenomenon has always been extremely rare in Hollywood history, and with the drive towards experience in movies today, we'll probably never see anything even close to it for a long time. And that's terrible.

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