What are your top three film adaptations of a novel?
What are your top three film adaptations of a novel?
@GeePawHill The Maltese Falcon (Bogie IS Sam Spade), MASH (the movie is so much more than the book), and Cuckoo's Nest (they told the story from a different point of view).
@hsfear Great choices!
@GeePawHill I'm trying to remember any times I've both read the book and saw the movie, and I'm coming up with Jurassic Park and a few of the wizard books from the awful person, so Jurassic Park it is!
@GeePawHill
I don't see Slaughterhouse Five in this thread.
I loved how, while covering the same ground, the film had a completely different feel from the book. Whereas the book ends with "And what do the birds say? All there is to say about a massacre. Things like 'poo-ta-weet?'" The film ends with the birth cry of Montana Wildhack's baby. It was such an up-beat ending!
The first time.
@GeePawHill
Limiting myself to having read the book, seen the movie, and loved both:
Inherent Vice
The Princess Bride (and I don’t care if it is cliched)
The Fellowship of the Ring (ditto, and the first film only)
@GeePawHill
Jurassic Park.
It took them three movies to cover all of the first book, but they did do it, and I liked the way they adapted it. Dropping that confused nonsense about fractals was a good move, too.
Firefox.
Admittedly, I haven't read the novel in many years, but I've rewatched the movie from time to time, and I've appreciated it more as I've gotten older. The final act is as fun and tense as ever, but I think they did a great job of conveying the fear, tension, paranoia and sacrifices in everything that led up to it.
I think part of the reason I like it so much is that I grew up on Bond movies, starting with Moonraker, and this feels like the darker, more realistic alter-ego.
Hellraiser.
Technically it was a novella, but I don't care. I grew up on movies and TV series that splashed their technical limitations all over the screen, so that's actually part of the charm for me. It wasn't entirely faithful, but still conveyed enough of the spirit to make me happy.
I also find it illuminating that the remake, complete with Mr Barker's approval, left me unmoved. It was in a whole other league in terms of technical execution, and Jamie Clayton's rendition of the lead cenobite was closer to the written description, but the spark was missing.
@GeePawHill I have a fondness for the 1978 version of Invasion of the Body Snatchers, although I'll take pretty much any adaptation over Jack Finney's novel. The novel isn't bad, but it's not a patch on Time And Again
@GeePawHill Tough one. The ones that jump to mind are the Shawshank Redemption and Stand By Me but these work because they were actually just short stories so the film didn’t have to make a lot of choices about what to cut
@GeePawHill I seem to have a lot of fave adaptations in the horror and thriller genres... I'm going to pick:
1. The Haunting (1963)
2. The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (2009-- the Swedish one)
3. Misery
Honorable mention to Jurassic Park 🦖
@beandreams "Misery" was certainly in my mind when I was thinking about it. Kathy Bates in a *stunning* performance.
@GeePawHill
I know someone said it already but it's gotta be _Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption_
It was the perfect novella. Fucking perfect. I read _Different Seasons_ to tatters, that line about the green milkshakes from McDonalds on St Patricks Day, are you kidding me? Then they go and cast Morgan Freeman as Red and it *works*
And as absurd as this seems, the second pick is from the same fucking book. _Stand By Me_
Third? Probably _To Kill A Mockingbird_
@kims "Stand By Me" is underrated.
There are many others that could make it, but right now:
1. Solaris (Tarkovsky)
2. No Country for Old Men
3. A Clockwork Orange
@ttiurani Interesting time range there.
@GeePawHill can't give you three.
But I'm the top of the list is and always will be: the name of the rose, based on Umberto Eco's.
Cast, Scenery and Cinematography are close to perfect. Eco's novels always explore complex philosophical ideas and the film does a good job of capturing that.
@rhold WOW. That's an interesting choice. I loved the novel. Of course, it had to be very compressed for the film. I think I only saw the film once.
Maybe I should take another swing at it!
@GeePawHill THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD and THE THING count as one entry in my head, both adapting "Who Goes There?" (novellas count, right?)
@SnoopJ Novellas count, for sure. Arguably, my number 1 "A Room With A View" is, well, a very short novel. :)
Somerset Maugham defined a novel as a prose work of a certain length that has something wrong with it.
@GeePawHill Does "The Big Lebowski" count? :)
@recursive I don't *think* that's an adaptation of a novel?
@GeePawHill Well, okay it's a parody of Raymond Chandler's _The Big Sleep_
@recursive The Coens say "-ish". :)
@GeePawHill The Sheltering Sky, Ghost in the Shell, A Clockwork Orange
@dtauvdiodr The first and third are classics, of course. I don't know "Ghost in the Shell".
@GeePawHill It is technically a Manga graphic novel, turned into a full-length feature Anime. Worth checking out, historically significant and highly influential.
For me, it's "A Room With A View", where everything looks and feels and sounds exactly like the (comparatively slim) novel.
Then, mmmm, prolly 'The Heart Is A Lonely Hunter", which is also in the running for top ten saddest movies of all time.
Third, ach, there's the rub, *third*!
Maybe "Remains of the Day"? "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest"? "Catch-22"?
I'll tell you one thing, this is not a game for children.
@GeePawHill
The Milagro Beanfield War
Little Women (2019, Greta Gerwig’s version)
The Wings of the Dove (1997)
@bucknam Strong candidates, tho I was excited about and then disappointed in your third.
@GeePawHill you can trade that for 1974’s The Taking of Pelham One Two Three if you want a better soundtrack and more Walter Matthau.
I am confident many will mention "The Princess Bride". It's a great adaptation, no doubt, but I bet a great many of the recommenders have never actually read the novel.
Anyway, top ten? Sure. Top three? Nawwww.
@GeePawHill
I can't narrow it down to top 3, but here's 5:
- The Martian
- Shawshank Redemption
- Dune
- Hidden Figures
- Contact
@valthonis @GeePawHill oooo yeah they did good with the Martian
@inherentlee @GeePawHill I was originally miffed about what they left out, but honestly I think the screenplay was better for it. Same justification I use when people complain about Tom Bombadil's omission from the LOTR films: the trimmed fat has to come from somewhere, and the stuff that was left out was the least painful place to cut.
@valthonis @inherentlee My wife, who read LOTR three times out loud to three different generations of children, *always* mentions the missing Tom Bombadil. :)
@valthonis Which Dune?
"Shawshank" is certainly a great one. Haven't read "The Martian", so can't say. "Contact" seems *very* adapted. :)
@GeePawHill The Villeneuve duology, tbh. The SciFy channel miniseries was quite good, but the newest films are so much more faithful than anything they or Lynch ever did.
This is like playing the "greatest cover" game. One's answer depends on one's definition of "greatest", and there is a tremendous amount of judgment involved in any such act of defining.
First, I spoze, you have to have loved the book. Then, you have to consider the color or flavor of faithfulness you demand.
Look, "Cuckoo's Nest", "Catch-22", "The English Patient", these are fat complicated books, and the films covered somewhere between a quarter and a third of the book.
@GeePawHill Every time you write "I spoze" I hear it like this
The film of "The Princess Bride" covers probably two thirds of the novel _The Princess Bride_. I got spanked the other day for asking people to read the novel, cuz the novel is letter-envelope, and the envelope is *so* important to understanding the meaning of the novel. (It's okay, I was prolly being an asshole, I do that sometimes.)
In the film, the envelope is reduced to Peter Falk the Grandpa.
And look, William Goldman wrote the novel *and* the screenplay.
For me, the point of the question and the joy I derive from the varied answers isn't about some quest for objectivity, or even a survey.
It's that it provokes, from certain ones of us, thoughts, and doubts, and affections, and grousing, and all that.
Cuz those certain ones of us? They're my favorite people. They're the ones I'm always tryna suck into a discourse.
💖
@GeePawHill Sometimes A Great Notion