The Book Was Better discussion
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Watching The Movie First
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There have only been a few times I have knowingly watched the movie before reading the book, and often it does make me like the movie more than I would have going in the opposite order. However, a few times where I have seen the movie and only then after found out it was a book, I found it too hard to go back and read. I would either think about the movie the whole time, or not want to change my feelings about the movies. I struggle every time reading the first Narnia book since I saw the movie easily a dozen times before I read the series for the first time. But, on the other hand, when I read Ella Enchanted YEARS after seeing the movie I was able to enjoy both, imagining them as two separate works completely.

Have you ever recommended to someone to watch the movies before reading the books?
I have watched many movies before reading the books (sometimes I was led to the book, other times no), and it is a hard decision to read a book when I know how the movie ends (even if internet spoilers may say that the ending was actually changed or something like that). I completely agree about Ella Enchanted!! I watched the movie many times, starting in 2004 when it was released, and I read the book two years ago. I was pleasantly surprised that both are so good and yet so different from each other!

It might be different for novels but that's my experience with a similar situation. :)

Nice! :)

That's why I wouldn't recommend watching the movie first, but if I do it on accident then reading the book still is enjoyable so I don't think it's a big deal.

Personally, I do try to read the books first, or only watch movies for which I don't really plan on reading the book.

My cousins have just started getting into Harry Potter. The older one was born the year that ..."
I wouldn't say "I recommend it", but this is what always happens to me. I start a movie or a series and then I find out they're based on books. Most recently with "Locke and Key" which is a visual novel. But, as you said, I find it more fulfilling because I can fill all the little gaps that weren't shown in the adaptation. I find it more frustrating when I read the material first as it happened to me with "Twilight". (I ended up hating both things, but that's another story)

It's always a problem, not only what to leave out of long or complex books, but what you can add to the screenplay that doesn't stray from what the author intended.



I have to say with Enola Holmes I LOVED the movie, but only liked the book. I read the second one as well and plan to read more, but they did not grab my attention as much as the movies. It's rare for me to say that, and maybe since I saw it before I read it that is part of the issue.....

But I have done it
Coraline
A few of the Harry Potter movies (but I dont think i finished watching the film)
The Lorax
Wizard of Oz
to a name a few



My cousins have just started getting into Harry Potter. The older one was born the year that Order of the Phoenix hit theatres and Deathly Hallows was published, so they are both old enough now to start watching the films. Their parents, having never read Harry Potter themselves, would like their children to read the books before they finish watching the movies (they have watched the first five), however when they asked my opinion, I had to disagree. When I watched Order of the Phoenix with them, it was a really interesting experience. They knew vaguely what would happen from rumors told at school, so none of the deaths or character hook-ups came as a surprise to them, but my favourite thing about them watching the movies first, and I told this to their parents, was that they are able to enjoy the movie as its own entity. As much as I do love the movie adaptation of Order of the Phoenix, I miss the scenes that were cut from the book, and with any Harry Potter movie, I always know what was left out. I think it is an amazing experience for kids to watch the movies first and then read the books to fill in all of the little gaps and learn so much more about the characters (this is what I recommended to their parents). It is a much more positive way to experience the stories, I think, because rather than think about everything that was missing from the books or not how we pictured it from the books, we can just enjoy the film for what it is.