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The Movie Changed it Forever
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Well, Jaws immediately comes to mind. None of the characters are remotely the same, with the exception of Quint. Also, the Richard Dreyfus character (view spoiler) Similarly, Jurassic Park made significant changes to the story, including changing the ending. Crichton preferred Spielberg’s version so much that The Lost World is a sequel to the film rather than his own novel. I don’t think another author has ever done that, allowing a movie to supplant his own ideas.
Roald Dahl *hated* Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, but like your example of Wizard of Oz, the movie has completely replaced the book in popular imagination. Everyone I know who’s read Charlie and the Chocolate Factory vastly prefers the musical. (Cue a dozen people here claiming they feel the opposite.😂)
A really interesting case is Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? versus Blade Runner. The stories are almost polar opposites of each other, yet they somehow reach the same conclusion. The imagery of the movie is incompatible with that of the novel, yet I couldn’t help but imagine the settings as I read the book, which was a weird experience.
The Fight Club DVD commentary between author Chuck Palahniuk and screenwriter Jim Uhls, who adapted Fight Club, is fascinating, because Palahniuk is full of effusive praise about the adaptation and Uhls barely says a word. I completely agree that Uhls took the book to an entirely new level, making it more cohesive, essentially turning the novel into a rough draft.
Stephen King’s story “The Mist” doesn’t have an ending. They just sort of drive off into the fog. But the movie… my god, there aren’t many films that have as brutal and bleak an ending as that. (view spoiler) The film’s ending is a billion times better… and worse.

Well, Jaws immediately comes to mind. None of the characters are remotely the same, with the excep..."
The Mist is a great example. That ending was perfect in the movie. Even King acknowledged how great it was.



The screenwriter came up with both “Life is like a box of chocklits” and “Run, Forrest, run!”, which sum up the character.


I really liked the movie (I was 12 when it came out in ‘77), but I looove the book.
However, the film’s Landmaster is cooler than the truck in the book, even though the book’s “car” makes more sense. No windows, only viewscreens, etc., but I kept envisioning the Landmaster as I read.
Movie: https://images.app.goo.gl/Q2iDW3VE9QZ...
Book: https://images.app.goo.gl/oWdjCkmAsRF...
Rogue One truck: https://images.app.goo.gl/4dnU1LXCt5e...

On the flip side, the original B&W version of Lord of the Flies - not that horrible color remake - practically used the book as a shooting script. I have a LaserDisk (no kidding - also a Sony player for my collection) of the film with a separate soundtrack of Golding reading the book. Amazing stuff.
When I was a cadet at USAFA, we watched the B&W as part of a psychology/sociology course.
But seriously avoid the color remake.

Which is why I avoid Peter Jackson's Hobbit movies like a COVID infection & wish I'd never seen the LOTR movies.


The Last Man on Earth (1964) starred Vincent Price. They made the vampires from the book into more zombie-like creatures. There were other deviations including the ending.
The Omega Man (1971) starred Charlton Heston. The vampires are created by a bacterial plague. The crucifixion scene was added on.
I Am Legend (2007) starred Will Smith. The movie uses ideas from the novel and from The Omega Man. The plague is started by a cancer vaccine gone wrong. The ending changes Robert Neville’s motivations.



I've read a bunch of 007 novels, but I had seen many of the movies 1st. My pipe dream for the franchise is for them to reboot & adapt (not necessarily faithfully), but in the original cold war era of the novels. A proof of concept example (kinda) is The Man from U.N.C.L.E. starring Henry Cavil.


That film was highly underappreciated.




Every MCU movie. 'Nuff said.["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>

The movie was by someone who doesn’t get Superman.

I would also say that the movie introduced the idea that (view spoiler) which adds a lot to the story. And of course the film changed "bounty hunter" into the much more interesting "Blade Runner," borrowed from Alan E. Nourse.

As is, the contrast between the extremely emotional replicants and the very cold Deckard showcases that point brillantly.
On topic, The Boys is an example of taking the initial premise but doing so much more with it in the TV series, as well as curtailing a lot of the super gratuitous Sex & Violence (while still being one of the most violent and perverted TV series on air)

Or it would add some really interesting wrinkles, especially when combined with the theme of Empathy from the novel.

The 1968 film is, for me, the definitive version of that story. The book is good and the allegory still holds up (especially these days), but whenever I think of the book I picture Charlton Heston having those experiences. The ending of the Tim Burton film more closely matches the book, but the less said about that movie the better. The recent trilogy is superb and easily the best iteration of the idea, but yeah, the OG Apes are my mental go-to.
Books mentioned in this topic
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (other topics)The Gunslinger (other topics)
American Psycho (other topics)
The Ipcress File (other topics)
You Only Live Twice (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Alan E. Nourse (other topics)Richard Matheson (other topics)
For example:
The ruby red slippers will never be the silver shoes.
Dorothy will be older with brown hair versus a Shirley Temple-like child.
The witch will be green with a broomstick instead of one-eyed with an umbrella.
What other novels have you seen made in other media and that film/TV has forever changed what you loved in the book? For good or for bad.