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Anybody else think movie adaptations suck?


southernjim
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I watched a few movies based off of comics, or books, that I loved, and immediately wanted to go hunt down whatever idiot director filmed these catastrophes. Anyone else had the same problem? I think everyone should watch The Lord of The Rings, or the (new) Punisher, if they haven't.
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There's a few Stephen King ones that stand out all were terrible versions...

 

Children of the Corn

Maximum Overdrive

It

The Tommyknockers

The Stand

 

The last three I admit are very difficult projects but still...

 

 

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QUOTE (treeduck @ Jan 10 2009, 05:42 PM)
There's a few Stephen King ones that stand out all were terrible versions...

Children of the Corn
Maximum Overdrive
It
The Tommyknockers
The Stand

The last three I admit are very difficult projects but still...

The movie "It" was pretty bad, but "Dreamcatcher" was worse.

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QUOTE (Turn Me On Dead Man @ Jan 10 2009, 05:53 PM)
QUOTE (treeduck @ Jan 10 2009, 05:42 PM)
There's a few Stephen King ones that stand out all were terrible versions...

Children of the Corn
Maximum Overdrive
It
The Tommyknockers
The Stand

The last three I admit are very difficult projects but still...

The movie "It" was pretty bad, but "Dreamcatcher" was worse.

Well I've not even read the book yet, glad I've not seen the film...

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I'm actually surprised at the number of films I can say were GOOD adaptations!

 

For years, the word on every movie was "the book was much better," but then I saw several films which were VERY FAITHFUL to the book, such as "The Accidental Tourist," "Snow Falling on Cedars," "House of Sand and Fog," "The DaVinci Code," and others.

 

Even "The Cider House Rules" (which won an Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay) was very true to the original book, despite the difficulty of adapting John Irving novels to the screen. (They did, however, eliminate a significant minor character, and condense 15 years into about 15 months.)

 

For the most part though: yes, the book is generally much better.

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QUOTE (treeduck @ Jan 10 2009, 06:08 PM)
QUOTE (Turn Me On Dead Man @ Jan 10 2009, 05:53 PM)
QUOTE (treeduck @ Jan 10 2009, 05:42 PM)
There's a few Stephen King ones that stand out all were terrible versions...

Children of the Corn
Maximum Overdrive
It
The Tommyknockers
The Stand

The last three I admit are very difficult projects but still...

The movie "It" was pretty bad, but "Dreamcatcher" was worse.

Well I've not even read the book yet, glad I've not seen the film...

The book's amazing. King outdid himself with that one. Another good read is "Misery."

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The Lord of the Rings trilogy is a major standout for me of successful movie adaptations, especially considering they were for so long considered "unfilmable."

 

Most of the times I've read a book and then seen the movie, though, I've been anywhere from slightly disappointed to extremely disappointed.

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QUOTE (Turn Me On Dead Man @ Jan 10 2009, 08:50 PM)
QUOTE (treeduck @ Jan 10 2009, 06:08 PM)
QUOTE (Turn Me On Dead Man @ Jan 10 2009, 05:53 PM)
QUOTE (treeduck @ Jan 10 2009, 05:42 PM)
There's a few Stephen King ones that stand out all were terrible versions...

Children of the Corn
Maximum Overdrive
It
The Tommyknockers
The Stand

The last three I admit are very difficult projects but still...

The movie "It" was pretty bad, but "Dreamcatcher" was worse.

Well I've not even read the book yet, glad I've not seen the film...

The book's amazing. King outdid himself with that one. Another good read is "Misery."

Oh god, "Dreamcatcher" was WRECKED on screen.

 

"Misery" was very well done, though, although I think ****SPOILER****

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

**that she should have cut his foot off with the axe, like it was in the book. The sledgehammer just didn't have the same horrific effect.**

Edited by Mara
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QUOTE (Turn Me On Dead Man @ Jan 10 2009, 08:50 PM)
QUOTE (treeduck @ Jan 10 2009, 06:08 PM)
QUOTE (Turn Me On Dead Man @ Jan 10 2009, 05:53 PM)
QUOTE (treeduck @ Jan 10 2009, 05:42 PM)
There's a few Stephen King ones that stand out all were terrible versions...

Children of the Corn
Maximum Overdrive
It
The Tommyknockers
The Stand

The last three I admit are very difficult projects but still...

The movie "It" was pretty bad, but "Dreamcatcher" was worse.

Well I've not even read the book yet, glad I've not seen the film...

The book's amazing. King outdid himself with that one. Another good read is "Misery."

Well I read Misery back in 1987 but not very many novels from this decade yet but that's all gonna change soon...fairly soon anyway...

 

cool.gif

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QUOTE (rushgoober @ Jan 10 2009, 10:21 PM)
The Lord of the Rings trilogy is a major standout for me of successful movie adaptations, especially considering they were for so long considered "unfilmable."

Most of the times I've read a book and then seen the movie, though, I've been anywhere from slightly disappointed to extremely disappointed.

Yer right Goob!

 

LOTR was amazing (and I use that word sparingly)!!!

 

Although not an exact version of the story, what was added, or deleted was fantastic for any Rings fan, although there were a couple of things that I felt could have been changed or deleted, but that just me being hyper-critical.

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QUOTE (Turn Me On Dead Man @ Jan 10 2009, 08:50 PM)
QUOTE (treeduck @ Jan 10 2009, 06:08 PM)
QUOTE (Turn Me On Dead Man @ Jan 10 2009, 05:53 PM)
QUOTE (treeduck @ Jan 10 2009, 05:42 PM)
There's a few Stephen King ones that stand out all were terrible versions...

Children of the Corn
Maximum Overdrive
It
The Tommyknockers
The Stand

The last three I admit are very difficult projects but still...

The movie "It" was pretty bad, but "Dreamcatcher" was worse.

Well I've not even read the book yet, glad I've not seen the film...

The book's amazing. King outdid himself with that one. Another good read is "Misery."

There have been many BAD versions of Kings books and although I liked the film version of Children of the Corn, and Max Overdrive.

 

Tommy Knockers sucked both book and movie, but It, The Stand were pretty good....except for the endiong of both which I thought were weakly portayed in the movies.

 

A couple other good adaptations of Kings books to film are:

 

Stand By Me (AKA The Body)

Shawshank Redemption

The Green Mile

Creepshow

 

There were a few other too.

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QUOTE (Prince Sphinc-Tor @ Jan 11 2009, 08:24 AM)
QUOTE (rushgoober @ Jan 10 2009, 10:21 PM)
The Lord of the Rings trilogy is a major standout for me of successful movie adaptations, especially considering they were for so long considered "unfilmable." 

Most of the times I've read a book and then seen the movie, though, I've been anywhere from slightly disappointed to extremely disappointed.

Yer right Goob!

 

LOTR was amazing (and I use that word sparingly)!!!

 

Although not an exact version of the story, what was added, or deleted was fantastic for any Rings fan, although there were a couple of things that I felt could have been changed or deleted, but that just me being hyper-critical.

Agreed! trink39.gif

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QUOTE (rushgoober @ Jan 11 2009, 11:02 AM)
The worst offender I can think of is DUNE.

The book is really fantastic, and the David Lynch movie version was awful. eh.gif

I couldn't agree more!

 

I saw Lynch's Dune in the theater, and thought it was pretty bad. As I walked out I heard someone say "man, the book is sooooo much better". I was intrigued so I read it and now I think it's one of the best novels ever written.

 

Have you seen the Sci Fi Channels's Dune miniseries? It's fantastic!Please check it out and you won't be disappointed as it's very

faithful to the book.

 

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QUOTE (Prince Sphinc-Tor @ Jan 11 2009, 08:24 AM)
QUOTE (rushgoober @ Jan 10 2009, 10:21 PM)
The Lord of the Rings trilogy is a major standout for me of successful movie adaptations, especially considering they were for so long considered "unfilmable." 

Most of the times I've read a book and then seen the movie, though, I've been anywhere from slightly disappointed to extremely disappointed.

Yer right Goob!

 

LOTR was amazing (and I use that word sparingly)!!!

 

Although not an exact version of the story, what was added, or deleted was fantastic for any Rings fan, although there were a couple of things that I felt could have been changed or deleted, but that just me being hyper-critical.

Visually LOTR was stunning and the story was moving, dramatic & epic by any standard, a remarkable bringing to life of Middle Earth.

 

But, and there's always a but, the changes to some of the characters and the asinine, forced conflict between Frodo & Sam just drives me crazy to this day.

 

 

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Does anyone read anything besides Horror and Sci-Fi/Fantasy? confused13.gif
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QUOTE (GeddyRulz @ Jan 11 2009, 05:30 PM)
Does anyone read anything besides Horror and Sci-Fi/Fantasy? confused13.gif

Yessss, I do! I am quite the fan of Carl Hiaasen, for example, and Richard Russo, to name a couple. (And for the record, Russo's Empire Falls got butchered in the film version).

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QUOTE (GeddyRulz @ Jan 11 2009, 05:30 PM)
Does anyone read anything besides Horror and Sci-Fi/Fantasy? confused13.gif

Well I read a lot of crime fiction, I think you call it mystery fiction in the US. Examples would be James Ellroy, Elmore Leonard, James Hall, George Pelicanos, James Crumley, James Lee Burke, Walter Mosley and old stagers like Dashiel Hammet and Ross and John D Macdonald and so on and so on. I'm also a fan of people like Cormac McCarthy, Don Delillo, Martin Amis etc..

 

Jack A reads a lot of history books btw...

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QUOTE (GeddyRulz @ Jan 11 2009, 05:30 PM)
Does anyone read anything besides Horror and Sci-Fi/Fantasy?  confused13.gif

I read posts on TRF.

 

I also read history, and non-fiction, A Bridge Too Far was a good movie although if they made an exact movie on that book, it would have been 150 hours long.

Edited by Prince Sphinc-Tor
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QUOTE (Prince Sphinc-Tor @ Jan 11 2009, 06:01 PM)
QUOTE (GeddyRulz @ Jan 11 2009, 05:30 PM)
Does anyone read anything besides Horror and Sci-Fi/Fantasy?  confused13.gif

I read posts on TRF.

 

I also read history, and non-fiction, A Bridge Too Far was a good movie although if they made an exact movie on that book, it would have been 150 hours long.

laugh.gif Very true! Remember that Cornelius Ryan also wrote The Longest Day so if you liked Bridge you should read that one, too.

 

GR, I think that most members here do. It seems that Rush attracts the sci-fi/fantasy crowd. I've read some sci-fi and a couple of books that would qualify as modern-day fantasy but I'm by no means an aficianado.

 

 

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QUOTE (Jack Aubrey @ Jan 11 2009, 06:56 PM)
QUOTE (Prince Sphinc-Tor @ Jan 11 2009, 06:01 PM)
QUOTE (GeddyRulz @ Jan 11 2009, 05:30 PM)
Does anyone read anything besides Horror and Sci-Fi/Fantasy?  confused13.gif

I read posts on TRF.

 

I also read history, and non-fiction, A Bridge Too Far was a good movie although if they made an exact movie on that book, it would have been 150 hours long.

laugh.gif Very true! Remember that Cornelius Ryan also wrote The Longest Day so if you liked Bridge you should read that one, too.

 

GR, I think that most members here do. It seems that Rush attracts the sci-fi/fantasy crowd. I've read some sci-fi and a couple of books that would qualify as modern-day fantasy but I'm by no means an aficianado.

Yeah, I've read some, too... especially in my teens. I was a big Tolkien head, and I... I... I played D&D. blush4.gif

 

I knew the Turn the Page crowd read more than just Sci-Fi/Fantasy and Horror, but it seemed those were the only genres being discussed in this "movie adaptation" thread.

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QUOTE (rushgoober @ Jan 11 2009, 09:51 PM)
QUOTE (Prince Sphinc-Tor @ Jan 11 2009, 04:01 PM)
A Bridge Too Far was a good movie although if they made an exact movie on that book, it would have been 150 hours long.

It would have been A Movie Too Long

laugh.gif

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