Films better than the books they are based on

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smithy1234

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Memento was based on a short story by the name of Memento Mori and the film was vastly superior.
 

FROGGEman2

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Mar 14, 2009
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Echer123 said:
FROGGEman2 said:
Too many people are choosing The Lord of The Rings for slow pace and Chronicles of Narnia for being childish.


I have feeling that YOU'RE MISSING THE FUCKING POINT.

Also, C.S. Lewis was a better writer than you.
First off, mind telling us what the point is before you start accusing us of missing it?
Second, that's a terrible excuse to make. We did not decide to be writers. He did, and it turns out he's terrible at it. Therefore, it is ok for us to criticise him without actually writing anything ourselves.
He isn't "a terrible writer", well, opinionslol, but I would argue that he was genuinely talented.

The point? Well, it is an analogy for the bible and the creation of Earth but MAINLY it is a children's book.

Dude, I loved those books!

That last point of mine was a joke, by the way.
 

Spaghetti

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Sep 2, 2009
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"Angels and Demon's" was a half decent movie that was worth the £3 i paid. The book on the other hand...well, it did a good job of keeping me warm these winter months.

Bad Cluster said:
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy was much better than the book in my opinion.
I chalenge you to a duel sir for sullying the honour of one of the greatest of books! Kill-O-Zap Guns at dawn I say!
 

molester jester

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grimsprice said:
Chronicles of Narnia. that is all.
Wait people like the Narnia films when did this happen, have they started making good ones ? , have they started making them in the right order ?
 

WolfThomas

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Dec 21, 2007
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molester jester said:
grimsprice said:
Chronicles of Narnia. that is all.
Wait people like the Narnia films when did this happen, have they started making good ones ? , have they started making them in the right order ?
Do you really expect a Magican's Nephew film? Or a horse and his boy? (Granted that is one of my favourites). For anyone going to see the film who hasn't read them, which I assume is a large number, they'll seem strange and out of place.
 

imp_spittle

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Nov 25, 2009
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The Name of the Rose: Umberto Eco's original novel was brilliant in many ways, but it went in too many directions and the giant blocks of Latin were more than a little daunting. The movie focused on several aspects of the book; admitted, many changes were made, but they made it a much simpler story that was easier to follow. Not that I have a problem with challenging writing; this novel was just too dense. The movie also featured rich scenery and excellent acting with more dramatic tension that seemed lacking in the book.

Dracula: Maybe I'm just not down with Victorian era fiction, but the journal style jumping from character to character and the overall writing style just bored the shit out of me; I have yet to finish the book. Bram Stoker's Dracula, starring Gary Oldman, however, stands as one of my favorite movies of all time. Stylish, erotic without being trashy, all-star cast (with the glaring inclusion of Keanu "Whoa" Reeves, the only lackluster part of the movie); oh yes, quite good indeed.

FROGGEman2 said:
Too many people are choosing The Lord of The Rings for slow pace and Chronicles of Narnia for being childish.

I am losing faith in humanity.
Never read or saw the Narnia series, but I have to agree on the Lord of the Rings. Methinks they should give the books another shot; the movies came off more like some sickening Dungeons & Dragons circlejerk.
 

molester jester

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BrynThomas said:
molester jester said:
grimsprice said:
Chronicles of Narnia. that is all.
Wait people like the Narnia films when did this happen, have they started making good ones ? , have they started making them in the right order ?
Do you really expect a Magican's Nephew film? Or a horse and his boy? (Granted that is one of my favourites). For anyone going to see the film who hasn't read them, which I assume is a large number, they'll seem strange and out of place.
Funny a horse and his boy was my favourite out of the series, But yes i would have loved to see those books made into movies instead of the cheap LOTR knock offs they are producing now. They may well seem strange and out of place but they still have an exciting story to tell, if they were were given a chance.
 

KingTiger

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Nov 6, 2009
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The Green Mile, The book is still good but the movie stirs the emotions in a crazy way.
 

Bad Cluster

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RossyB said:
I chalenge you to a duel sir for sullying the honour of one of the greatest of books! Kill-O-Zap Guns at dawn I say!
HAHAHA!
Don't panic!
You've just encountered a being with a different opinion than yours ;)

By the way, did I say the book was bad? Nop, I didn't, simply the movie was better in my opinion.

As for Sci-Fi satire, nothing beats Stanislaw Lem's Star Diaries.
 

Altorin

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May 16, 2008
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KingTiger said:
The Green Mile, The book is still good but the movie stirs the emotions in a crazy way.
I actually found the Green Mile to be one of the best Movie Adaptations. When I was reading the Green Mile, the movie was playing in my head, and there was VERY LITTLE that was removed from the book when they made the movie (then again, the movie is hugely long, but I digress). The Green Mile was a great novel which they made into a great movie. This thread is mostly about shitty novels that became good movies.

And to the person that mentioned Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, fuck the hell no. like, holy fuck no. The ONLY redeeming quality of the movie is the fact that it's NOTHING like the book. Everytime Adams re-made Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, be it for radio, old TV shows, video games, etc. They were always different, sometimes in huge ways.

But to say that the movie was BETTER then the book... I puked in my mouth just thinking about it.
 

FROGGEman2

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imp_spittle said:
The Name of the Rose: Umberto Eco's original novel was brilliant in many ways, but it went in too many directions and the giant blocks of Latin were more than a little daunting. The movie focused on several aspects of the book; admitted, many changes were made, but they made it a much simpler story that was easier to follow. Not that I have a problem with challenging writing; this novel was just too dense. The movie also featured rich scenery and excellent acting with more dramatic tension that seemed lacking in the book.

Dracula: Maybe I'm just not down with Victorian era fiction, but the journal style jumping from character to character and the overall writing style just bored the shit out of me; I have yet to finish the book. Bram Stoker's Dracula, starring Gary Oldman, however, stands as one of my favorite movies of all time. Stylish, erotic without being trashy, all-star cast (with the glaring inclusion of Keanu "Whoa" Reeves, the only lackluster part of the movie); oh yes, quite good indeed.

FROGGEman2 said:
Too many people are choosing The Lord of The Rings for slow pace and Chronicles of Narnia for being childish.

I am losing faith in humanity.
Never read or saw the Narnia series, but I have to agree on the Lord of the Rings. Methinks they should give the books another shot; the movies came off more like some sickening Dungeons & Dragons circlejerk.
True, but that could just be the transition to a visual medium.

"What do you see with your Elf eyes?" isn't so bad when on paper, but said aloud it's a little weird.

I do generally have an issue with the idea of "better because it didn't bore the shit outta me" (no offense intended) 'cause of the high chance that the reader just ain't sophisticated enough to get it.

Still, opinions, right? The merit as to whether the reader can understand the writing or not is basically irrelevant.
 

imp_spittle

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Nov 25, 2009
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FROGGEman2 said:
imp_spittle said:
The Name of the Rose: Umberto Eco's original novel was brilliant in many ways, but it went in too many directions and the giant blocks of Latin were more than a little daunting. The movie focused on several aspects of the book; admitted, many changes were made, but they made it a much simpler story that was easier to follow. Not that I have a problem with challenging writing; this novel was just too dense. The movie also featured rich scenery and excellent acting with more dramatic tension that seemed lacking in the book.

Dracula: Maybe I'm just not down with Victorian era fiction, but the journal style jumping from character to character and the overall writing style just bored the shit out of me; I have yet to finish the book. Bram Stoker's Dracula, starring Gary Oldman, however, stands as one of my favorite movies of all time. Stylish, erotic without being trashy, all-star cast (with the glaring inclusion of Keanu "Whoa" Reeves, the only lackluster part of the movie); oh yes, quite good indeed.

FROGGEman2 said:
Too many people are choosing The Lord of The Rings for slow pace and Chronicles of Narnia for being childish.

I am losing faith in humanity.
Never read or saw the Narnia series, but I have to agree on the Lord of the Rings. Methinks they should give the books another shot; the movies came off more like some sickening Dungeons & Dragons circlejerk.
True, but that could just be the transition to a visual medium.

"What do you see with your Elf eyes?" isn't so bad when on paper, but said aloud it's a little weird.

I do generally have an issue with the idea of "better because it didn't bore the shit outta me" (no offense intended) 'cause of the high chance that the reader just ain't sophisticated enough to get it.

Still, opinions, right? The merit as to whether the reader can understand the writing or not is basically irrelevant.
Oh, I was quite aware of my own hypocrisy, calling Dracula out for being boring but celebrating LotR. It all boils down to personal preference. A major aspect is what someone is expecting from the book. I was expecting Dracula to be much different from what it was, so perhaps I was the problem, not the book. I'm willing to go back someday to give it another go, but finding it among the vast piles of books I own is the problem.
 

manaman

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BrynThomas said:
manaman said:
I also have no idea where you got the bear creatures from. The dragon and the Grendel where re-imagined into a single threat: The mist-monsters, a band of Neanderthals.
Sorry I said bear creature, instead of tribe of primitive humans pretending to be bears, because the early parts of the film make the enemy appear supernatural/monstrous and more scary, it is only to the big battle in the middle, that they realise they are men. I was trying not to spoil that reveal.
Ah, it just seemed that you watched the movie long ago, and read the book even longer ago. I thought the book made it fairly obvious that they where men early on, just not clear on what kind of men until later. The movie never really made it clear that they where Neanderthals.
 

WolfThomas

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Dec 21, 2007
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manaman said:
Ah, it just seemed that you watched the movie long ago, and read the book even longer ago. I thought the book made it fairly obvious that they where men early on, just not clear on what kind of men until later. The movie never really made it clear that they where Neanderthals.
Yeah it's I guess it's been awhile.
 

NickIsCool

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Nov 18, 2009
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grimsprice said:
Chronicles of Narnia. that is all.
first movie was ok

second one sucked hard

it had "big" set pieces that where anything but interesting

and it lost alot of the character development that happened in the first one