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Adaptations
I don't like it when they rewrite the story for the movie. Gone With the Wind would have been 8 or more hours, but they could have gotten most of it right.
Like movies based on short stories or novellas so it all gets in there. Stand By Me is one of my favorites.
Like movies based on short stories or novellas so it all gets in there. Stand By Me is one of my favorites.

I like the Harry Potter movies in general, but they leave out a lot. And the last one changed something toward the end in a really inexplicable way.
The Twilight movie, I thought, improved on the book by interweaving the menacing approach of James, Laurent, and Victoria. The movie Bella is at least aware that 'something wicked this way comes' (sorry, couldn't resist), instead of having it suddenly sprung it on her like Meyer did in the book.

Like movies based on short stories or n..."
I concure Syra. Stand By Me (The Body) and Shawshank Redemption both were great renditions, of the short stories by Stephen King.
The attempt to turn The Colorado Kid into a tv mini series seems a little trite, perhaps?

Some screen writers and directors do a wonderful job of improving upon a story, and do their best to ensure there are little, or at least minor deviations. It's so upsetting when the opposite happening.


I'm one of those who think the BBC Firth-Ehle version of Pride and Prejudice is the gold standard for P&P adaptations, though I haven't seen the 2005 version. Another absolutely outstanding Austen adaptation is the one of Sense and Sensibility starring Emma Thompson (who also wrote the screenplay). And I think the 1994 film starring Winona Ryder and Susan Sarandon really brings Little Women to life in a masterful way.




It's often the case that, in a dramatic adaptation, where you can actually see and hear the characters, their impact (positive or negative) is heightened. The miniseries version DOES bring Mrs. Bennett to very annoying life, and Caroline is worse than annoying. (I greatly wished that somebody'd haul off and slap her. :-) )

In the early 70s, I attended a community theater stage production of Dracula in my home town, which was a fairly free adaptation of the novel, but preserved the essential premise and characterizations, and which I enjoyed quite a bit. (At that time, I hadn't read the book.) And when I was in college, I enjoyed a college adaptation of Henry James' Washington Square for the stage. I don't know how faithful it was, but I'd say it had the sort of ironic plot that James often went in for.


"The Martian" was one instance where I enjoyed the book and the movie equally well. The book was so detailed and did a thorough job of immersing the reader in the events and the atmosphere. However, I also feel that Matt Damon was incredible in the adaptation, and really carried the movie, with an understated intensity that permeated every scene.
I'm really looking forward to the latest "Jungle Book," movie adaptation, and plan to watch it on DVD next weekend. I have one friend who also still enjoys, as an adult, some children's movies. Anyone else out there?


Christine, my wife and I both can enjoy some children's movies, as well as books. And I have other adult Goodreads friends who feel the same way. People's tastes in both books and movies, if they enjoy both, are usually similar, since the two art forms have a lot in common. That's why C. S. Lewis' comments below about books apply to movies as well. He didn't think that children's and adults' tastes were really two utterly different species:
"...the peculiarity of child readers is that they are not peculiar.... Of course their limited vocabulary and general ignorance make some books unintelligible to them. But apart from that, juvenile taste is simply human taste.... When the literary Establishment --the approved canon of taste-- is so extremely jejune and narrow as it is today, much has to be addressed in the first instance to children if it is to get printed at all.... The right sort [of children's authors] work from the common, universally human ground they share with the children, and indeed with countless adults." --"On Juvenile Tastes"
"I was therefore writing 'for children' only in the sense that I excluded what I thought they would not like or understand; not in the sense of writing what I believed to be below adult attention.... I never wrote down to anyone; and... it certainly is my opinion that a book worth reading only in childhood is not worth reading even then." --"Sometimes Fairy Stories May Say Best What's To Be Said."

Nina, speaking in terms of movie adaptations in general, I personally think that if filmmakers profess to be "adapting" a particular novel for the screen, they should follow it as closely as is reasonably possible. And that certainly includes not totally changing the setting!

I, too, enjoy what some people call children's movies. A lot of them are animated. I think it's better to call them "animated movies" than "children's" or even "family movies". There are plenty of things that can be enjoyed by all--or many--ages.
When I think of "children's" stuff, I think of things that are so narrowly focused for a young audience that they bore or irritate anyone over the age of 12 to tears.
BTW--Neil Gaiman has some really interesting thoughts about categorising works by age.

I own the movie version that has Michelle Pfeiffer and Kevin Kline in it.





It's good that they started out with the Bard early, Nina! I never saw a Shakespeare play performed until I was in college; but when I was a kid we had a two-volume collection of the plays in the house, and I read a few of them over the years.


Cool!




Peggy, what wonderful experience indeed! And especially more so that you were at such an impressionable age. :-)

That's the one! Lol

Peggy, what wonderful experience indeed! And especially more so that you were at such an impressionable age. :-)"
It was great. It helped that my dad was stationed in Germany. It made travel a lot easier and cheaper. We traveled around Germany (lots of interesting castles and some great food). I also went to France and Spain. I didn't see much in Spain though. It was a youth group trip to Mallorca and we spent most of the time on the beach.

Now I'm watching a slightly later dramatisation, a BBC miniseries from 2008 in 3 parts. LINK HERE. It too is excellent - and more faithful to the book! I'd happily recommend either of these. The acting in both is superb, and sets and production values likewise. A pleasure to watch, plus the miniseries is more thorough than the film, as it is far longer :)

I checked just now, and surprisingly, I've never mentioned the Emma Thompson production there; I'd already watched it years before joining this group, so it wasn't part of my current viewing by the time I was commenting there. But I did mention it on this thread, in message 7; and like you, Jean, I really like it!
I hadn't heard about the new BBC miniseries. Thanks for the heads-up; I'll have to keep an eye out for that one.

Another comparison of Jane Austen adaptations which springs to mind is the 2005 film of Pride and Prejudice. In this case, I don't think it is a patch on the BBC miniseries from 1995.

I'm not sure what this means "a patch".

Jean can no doubt explain it better than I can. But since she probably hasn't seen the question yet because of the time difference between the two countries, I thought I'd share this in the meantime!


I've been trying to find the derivation of "not a patch on", Reggia, but all I can discover is that it was first used in 1860 - and I do not know where it was recorded :( Sorry - I never realised it is primarily used in England!
Donnally - I very much like that miniseries too - and think Werner has only recently watched it - so may have some better comments :)

I did watch it at the end of August (the imdb link is here: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0108858/ ). But since my reading of the book was back in the late 90s, Donnally's much better equipped to evaluate its fidelity to the book than I am. (It did inspire me to want to reread the book, though, and I hope to do that next year!) Considered just in its own right, though, it's an outstanding production in every respect --story, performances and cinematography.
Books mentioned in this topic
Pride and Prejudice (other topics)Middlemarch (other topics)
Pride and Prejudice (other topics)
Sense and Sensibility (other topics)
The Odyssey (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Jane Austen (other topics)Jane Austen (other topics)
Jane Austen (other topics)
Emma Thompson (other topics)
Stephen King (other topics)
For instance:
I really enjoyed the 2005 version of Pride and Prejudice (starring Keira Knightley, Matthew Macfadyen, Brenda Blethyn, Donald Sutherland and Judi Dench). I thought it was well cast and well acted, and that it was a good condensation of the story. I know many people prefer the BBC miniseries with Colin Firth and Jennifer Ehle, but I found that much more difficult to get through. It's easier for me to read whiny or superficial characters (such as Mrs. Bennet and Caroline Bingley) than to have to listen to them. I also found Colin Firth's interpretation of Mr. Darcy's arrogance as more hateful than intriguing, although he does grow sweeter as the story goes on.