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The T
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Topic: "the book is better than the movie"... Posted: April 02 2007 at 10:33 |
By the way ben prog-"I'll die if I don't post 500 messagges every day-ismylife, this is not about your comment but it gave me the idea. Don't you people hate it when other people that just saw a movie based on a book say "oh, but the book was better"...wouldn't you say it is a ridiculous comparison, when you have two different artistic languages where things that work in one don't do so in the other and viceversa, when the resources and the "color palette" is totally different? When you adapt a movie from a book, the book ENDS the moment a screenplay based on it exists. The book is a separate entity from the movie, and sometimes for artistic purposes changes are made to the story in the book.
What do you say?
What do you think?
Is it already May?
Is that hair on your sink?
There won't be a day
when Ben doesn't post
what is your pay,
that you post the most????
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Trickster F.
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Joined: February 10 2006
Location: Belize
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Points: 5308
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Posted: April 02 2007 at 10:43 |
A literary work is made to convey a particular idea or plot. It is the original that matters in the end. A film based around a literary work may have its own ideas and aims but it will never succeed in doing it the same the book did. To hear it from the exact source, read the original. I stopped watching films a few years ago anyway, so I may not be the right person to ask.
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clarke2001
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Posted: April 02 2007 at 11:08 |
The T wrote:
By the way ben prog-"I'll die if I don't post 500 messagges every day-ismylife, this is not about your comment but it gave me the idea. Don't you people hate it when other people that just saw a movie based on a book say "oh, but the book was better"... |
I don't hate it, actually, I agree with that point of view. You know, we, progheads, are a little bit snobbish sometimes. Jokes aside, the books are better than movies, in the majority of cases. I agree that two different artistic languages are using two different color palettes, so to say, but I have a certain respect for the original. Of course, we can argue which one is better: Queen's Fairy Feller's Masterstroke or the original painting? Camel's Snow Goose or the novel? A film is a very specific art sub-genre. Nowadays it's too commercial, too crowd-pleasing. Hollywood is pop of art called cinematography. For example: Stanislaw Lem's Solaris is a masterpiece of literature, hands down. Tarkovsky's movie is a masterpiece too! But Hollywood's remake of Solaris with Clooney is just a pile of special effects and sh!t. Another example: I really doubt there is one Tolkien fan in this world who thinks that Lord Of The Rings is better as movie trilogy than book trilogy. Of course, they are two different media, and movie trilogy as a standalone piece is working just fine, but you can't avoid comparisons, they are sharing the same core idea, for God's sake! There are cases when a book and a movie are equally good: Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey and Arthur C. Clarke's book (although he wrote the book after he wrote the screenplay). The cases when a movie based upon a book is better than a book itself are very rare in my opinion, the only example that I could think of right now is Forrest Gump.
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Eetu Pellonpaa
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Posted: April 02 2007 at 11:24 |
I often like the version of which I see first, especially if it maks a big impression on me. F.Ex. "Solaris" and "Stalker" are better as films, as I was enchanted by the vision of Andrey Tarkovski, and the books felt quite flat after reading them with the memory of the film in my head. Also "Dune" works better me as Lynch's film than the book.
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sleeper
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Joined: October 09 2005
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Posted: April 02 2007 at 17:16 |
I am definitely guilty of saying this on the few occaisions that I have seen a film and have read the literary source its from. Film can be an astounding mediem to convey ideas but I find only truly works best when using original ideas rather than those taken from a book. Basically a book can pack in more to get across the ideas and have them take far longer to progress, or to diverge down many different paths than a film can phisically do, unless you want a 12 hour film. I'm not saying that its impossible to get a book successfully converted to a film but it will always be an uphill struggle unless the source material isnt that good.
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Spending more than I should on Prog since 2005
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NutterAlert
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Joined: June 07 2005
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Posted: April 02 2007 at 17:17 |
Has to be Deep Throat, such a lovely book.
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Proud to be an un-banned member since 2005
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progismylife
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Posted: April 02 2007 at 17:24 |
I see my name has changed to prog-"I'll die if I don't post 500 messagges every day-ismylife. As the inspiration of this thread I am guilty of saying this. a lot. The reason I say this is because when I read a book I let my imagination run wild with enjoyment and picture it anyway I feel like it (sometimes very different images when rereading a book). Movies sort of hamper that process for me as the director has shown his view of the novel and most people accept it that way and don't give the book a chance to give a different perspective to how the author planned it. I enjoy the movies but I like being imaginative when reading books such as LOTR. It was a good adaptation of the movie and I liked it a lot (so much so that I got the special edition DVDs for all three movies and watched everything on them)
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clarke2001
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Posted: April 03 2007 at 13:05 |
progismylife wrote:
As the inspiration of this thread I am guilty of saying this. a lot. The reason I say this is because when I read a book I let my imagination run wild with enjoyment and picture it anyway I feel like it (sometimes very different images when rereading a book). Movies sort of hamper that process for me as the director has shown his view of the novel and most people accept it that way and don't give the book a chance to give a different perspective to how the author planned it.
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With you on that. And the worst possible thing is, after you watched a movie, you are not able to imagine a scenery from a book in a different way any more! Somehow, your vision of the story will always be spoiled with the scenery from the movie, and that sucks.
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progismylife
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Posted: April 03 2007 at 13:07 |
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VanderGraafKommandöh
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Posted: April 03 2007 at 13:53 |
NutterAlert wrote:
Has to be Deep Throat, such a lovely book.
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Don't forget Debbie Does Dallas.
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rockitmarty
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Joined: November 08 2005
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Posted: April 04 2007 at 13:53 |
[QUOTE=The T]By the way ben prog-"I'll die if I don't post 500 messagges every day-ismylife, this is not about your comment but it gave me the idea. Don't you people hate it when other people that just saw a movie based on a book say "oh, but the book was better"...wouldn't you say it is a ridiculous comparison, when you have two different artistic languages where things that work in one don't do so in the other and viceversa, when the resources and the "color palette" is totally different? When you adapt a movie from a book, the book ENDS the moment a screenplay based on it exists. The book is a separate entity from the movie, and sometimes for artistic purposes changes are made to the story in the book.
THE BOOK IS ALWAYS BETTER ONLY BECAUSE THEY CAN'T FIGURE OUT HOW TO TIE THE ENTIRE BOOK INTO A TWO HOUR FILM. SOMETIMES ITS SAD TO WATCH A MOVIE BASED ON A BOOK BECAUSE OF THE DISAPOINTMENT YOU FACE!
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el böthy
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Joined: April 27 2005
Location: Argentina
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Points: 6336
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Posted: September 19 2007 at 23:14 |
I liked the Lord of the rings better than the books...
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"You want me to play what, Robert?"
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moreitsythanyou
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Posted: September 19 2007 at 23:19 |
Most blatant and striking example, the fifth Hary Potter Book. It wasn't even that strong to begin with, but the movie was an embarassment.
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<font color=white>butts, lol[/COLOR]
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stonebeard
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Posted: September 19 2007 at 23:21 |
Dune. Dune. And more Dune
Oh, I almost forgot Dune.
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bluetailfly
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Posted: September 19 2007 at 23:50 |
It depends on how the screen writer adapts the story to film. That is what will determine if the movie should be judged on its own merits.
If a screenwriter merely edits the story down and presents it in a straightfoward way, i.e., simply "illustrates" the written word with a camera like an unimaginative comic book, then the movie does allow for a comparison to the written work and those who know the written work can rightly say that the movie didn't do the book justice or whatever.
However, if the screen writer and director and cinematographer took the time to adapt the story--it's themes, motifs, character struggles, etc--artistically into cinematic language, then I believe the movie stands on it's own as an artistic work and a one-for-one comparison of the book to movie isn't really a relevant approach to judging the movie.
Edited by bluetailfly - September 19 2007 at 23:51
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"The red polygon's only desire / is to get to the blue triangle."
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Sean Trane
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Posted: September 20 2007 at 05:46 |
the book is always better than the movie.
The only exception I can think of are
Stand By Me >> adaptation of Stephen King's The Body novella in Dofferent Seasons
Shawshank Redemption >> about as excellent as the novella also from the same book
The Shining is very different from the book, but poarticularly good as well.
Edited by Sean Trane - September 20 2007 at 05:48
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let's just stay above the moral melee prefer the sink to the gutter keep our sand-castle virtues content to be a doer as well as a thinker, prefer lifting our pen rather than un-sheath our sword
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Shakespeare
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Joined: July 18 2006
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Points: 7744
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Posted: September 20 2007 at 08:40 |
stonebeard wrote:
Dune. Dune. And more Dune
Oh, I almost forgot Dune. |
I was young when I read it...Didn't enjoy it to its full extent, didn't understand everything, and I totally forget most of it now. But my mom told me the movies were terrible so I never bothered to jog my memory that way... Oh yes, the books are always better, by a very large margin. Look at Harry Potter: BOOKS: WTF IS THIS TRASH?!?!?!
MOVIES: *Chameleon's suicide smiley*
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andu
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Joined: September 27 2006
Location: Romania
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Posted: September 20 2007 at 08:48 |
I remember saying this on another thread dealing with the same subject
- we all must remember that a movie is not and can not be the
equivalent of a novel, because of the completely different amount of
"time and space" they can "contain". It's not fair comparing a movie to
a novel, and very few movies managed to have the complexity of a novel.
They are just to limited by constraints - it has often happened to me
to take a novel in hand and only leave it when finished, a day (or a
night) after. But who could ever sit through an 8 hours film? The film
is the equivalent of the short story (a novella). One example is "The
Duellists" - Joseph Conrad's story is superb, but Ridley Scott's film
is a masterpiece. We should also look for those great movies who are not based on famous books, of course it's difficult to surpass a great novel. Many of great films, however, are based on books that are not really that good - that's a good start for thinking of some examples. How many people would say "Heart of Darkness" (the book) is better that "Apocalypse Now" (the movie)?
Anyone here read "The Leopard" and "Death in Venice"? I'm curious, as Visconti's films are incredible masterpieces.
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Raff
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Posted: September 20 2007 at 08:52 |
andu wrote:
Anyone here read "The Leopard" and "Death in Venice"? I'm curious, as Visconti's films are incredible masterpieces.
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I've read them both, and I would say that the movies are probably on a par with the books in terms of artistic quality. Mind you, the media are vastly different, so a comparison in terms of "better" and "worse" probably would not hold. Both books are great, but their visual translations are perfect.
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cuncuna
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Joined: March 29 2005
Location: Chile
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Points: 4318
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Posted: September 20 2007 at 12:53 |
Orlando. The movie is a good effort, though. Uhm... I saw a movie version of "El llano en llamas", but that was just anecdotic... it's impossible to pass that book to any other format.
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¡Beware of the Bee!
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