Trisha at eclectic / eccentric has a really fun post, Adaptations Lists and Giveaways, where she’s listed 5 books that she wishes were movies, and 5 books that she wishes never were. I have to agree with her on Eragon, one of the worst travesties done to a book EVER, but not on a few of the others. I enjoyed reading hers so much, I wanted to play to 🙂 So here’s my 5 and 5.
FIVE books that I’d trade a body part to be movies:
- Nation by Terry Pratchett ~ It was fantastic, funny, had a great message, and it just lent itself to visualization. AND it’d have gorgeous South Pacific scenery that would be breath-taking on a big screen. I think that’d be worth a spleen, at least… I mean, what does that thing do, anyway?
- The Stephanie Plum Novels by Janet Evanovich ~ I’d trade a kidney for a TV series of this. Grandma Mazur, in my living room, every week. Oh, that would almost make up for the end of LOST!
- Molly Moon and the Incredible Book of Hypnotism by Georgia Byng ~ It’d be worth a lung lobe just to watch a gummy Miss Adderstone use her false teeth like castanets. And I think they could do a lot of fun stuff visually with the hypnotism. Oh, any movie can be improved by throwing a pug dog in the story 🙂
- Goblins! An UnderEarth Adventure by Royce Buckingham ~ Goblins. SNOT. and it’s all underground. It’d be a good cult classic. Ok, so I LOVE movies like A Gnome Named Gnorm… and am apparently alone in that given it’s 4 out of 10 stars rating, Super Mario Bros, and Jim Henson’s Labyrinth, and I think this one could be a cool movie.
- Homer’s Odyssey by Gwen Cooper ~ Okay, I’d trade a cornea for this one. El Mochito, the Daredevil, the blind Wonder Cat who defends his mom from the burglar, and whose heart is so big that he enraptures everyone who ever meets him… well, except for Lawrence. He was too smitten with Vashti. It’d be way better than that Marley & Me movie, and BEST OF ALL, the cat would still be alive at the end. Gawd, I hated the end of Marley. I don’t want to think about my pets dying. I know it’ll happen, but don’t put it in my “feel-good” movie. Marley & Me was like being a manic/depressive for 110 minutes… and I still gave it 5 stars at Netflix.
There should be a special place in HELL for the people who made thes FIVE books into movies:
- The Inheritance Cycle (or the movie Eragon) by Christopher Paolini, obviously. A place in Hell where they’re forced to sit in front of a movie screen and endure inane details of a random person’s life, but NEVER get anything good or inspiring or accurate. Every good part was cut from the books and then they watered down the surface story, left even more out, and called it a movie. First off, ERAGON is the name of ONE book, and yet they made the whole book series in this one movie. Nasuada is one of my favorite characters, and she’s an important character, but she’s no where in the movie. What about Eragon’s training with the Elves? and where’s Solombum, the were-cat? Grr… horrible rendering.
- The Memory Keeper’s Daughter by Kim Edwards ~ That movie sucked so bad, I actually dropped my rating on the book after watching it. The book was complex and had depth, but the movie was just weak. Whoever made THAT drivel should be stripped of their sense of smell, have their taste buds seared off, be stricken color-blind and then spend eternity seated at a table loaded with all their favorite foods.
- Hearts in Atlantis by Stephen King ~ You know, the sad thing about this one is, SK himself approved the script. The book itself has 2 novella stories to it, one centered around playing Hearts at college, and the second where the guy’s an alien hiding out and other aliens come looking for him. But the movie has NONE of the Hearts to it, and what’s left of the Atlantis part is stripped of all the magic that made me love it. In the end, it’s just another lousy Stephen King book-to-movie.
- The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini ~ Honestly, it’s not the movie makers fault that it was a bad book-to-movie. There was NO WAY for them to translate all that goes on inside the narrator’s head, the nuances of the people, and the sense of fear/doom/loss/inadequacy that made up this book. It wasn’t JUST about him not standing up for his friend and allowing him to be hurt, but it’s about how that one moment was the still point that his whole life and identity grew out of. I think it’s fair to give the movie people a pardon on this one.
- The Hours by Michael Cunningham ~ Okay, I’ve never read the book, so I can’t say whether they did a bad job of making the movie, but here is what I can say: After watching that movie, I would NEVER read the book. What’s more, I don’t want to go near a Virgina Woolfe book because of it. It gave me the impression that her books are very depressing and I’d want to kill myself after reading it. I might’ve read one of her books before that, I think I even have Mrs. Dalloway somewhere, but every time I think about her books, I think about drowning myself in the bathtub and it’s all because of that movie.
A couple books being made into movies that I’m reserving space on my WORST movie adaptations EVER mental list are:
- The Giver by Lois Lowry ~ right now, it’s set to come out 2011, but that’ll probably get pushed back. It’s suppose to be done by the director who did the last few Harry Potter movies, so they’ve had to wait for those to wrap up. I just can’t see how this book could work as a movie for the same reasons The Kite Runner was a miss. There’s so much going on mentally, how can they show that on the screen?
- The Road by Cormac McCarthy ~ Viggo Mortensen as the man… big, big plus. It could really be another Mad Max or Blade Runner and be a raging success, but it could just as easily tank hard. It’s another one of those mental books, though the scenery could be amazing. They HAVE to have the cellar scene in it, though, or it’ll be a deal breaker.
- The Book Thief by Markus Zusak ~ The book was perfection. A movie will screw it up. There’s NO WAY it can be done.
Oh, and by the way… Don’t forget to Trisha’s having a contest for this:
Giveaway:
If you make a post about this topic and leave a link in the comments section, I will 1) add you to the list below and 2) enter you into a giveaway for one of the following books:
1. It’s Easy Being Green by Crissy Trask
2. No Touch Monkey by Ayun Halliday
3. Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad
4. The Reader by Bernhard SchlinkThe contest closes at midnight January 17.
So what books do you think would be a hit or were a miss?
Filed under: books to movies, Giveaways | Tagged: adaptations, Atlantis, Ayun Halliday, Bernhard Schlink, Blade Runner, blind cat, books to movies, Christopher Paolini, Cormac McCarthy, Crissy Trask, Daredevil, depression, El Mochito, Eragon, Georgia Byng, Gnome Named Gnorm, Goblins!, Grandma Mazur, Gwen Cooper, Harry Potter, Heart of Darkness, Hearts, Hearts in Atlantis, Homer's Odyssey, It's Easy Being Green, Janet Evanovich, Jim Henson, Joseph Conrad, Khaled Hosseini, Kim Edwards, Labyrinth, Lois Lowry, Mad Max, Markus Zusak, Marley & Me, Michael Cunningham, Miss Adderstone, Molly Moon, movie, movie adaptations, movies, Mrs. Dalloway, Nasuada, Nation, No Touch Monkey, Solombum, Stephanie Plum, Stephen King, suicide, Super Mario Bros, Super Mario Brothers movie, Terry Pratchett, The Book Thief, The Giver, The Hours, The Inheritance Cycle, The Kite Runner, The Memory Keeper's Daughter, The Reader, The Road, Virginia Woolfe, werecat |
Inkheart – loved the book (it’s actually my favorite), liked the movie (but I think it’s really only a sentimental sort of like because I love the story so much I put up with all the issues of the movie that ordinarily I would’ve snarked at). I think if one were to watch the movie without having read the book, it would lead them to not want to read the book, which is a shame.
The Golden Compass…ditto.
Gotta agree with you about the Stephanie Plum novels as a show, but then they’d probably pick an actress like Angie Harmon (think Patterson’s Women’s Murder Club) as Stephanie and it would totally suck.
My daughter has Inkheart, and I’ve been meaning to get around to reading it but haven’t yet. I want to do that before watching the movie.
I saw Golden Compass, but have never read the books. I don’t like Pullman. at all. He annoys me. So the movie didn’t ruin the books for me, the author did.
lol… I’ve always pictured a younger Laura San Giacomo as my Stephanie, but she’s definitely too old to play her now -she’s almost 50!
I think Sandra Bullock might be ok as Stephanie–I LOVE Grandma Mazur!
The movie that surprised me with it’s incredible true-to-the-bookness wasn’t actually a movie, but a mini-series–Lonesome Dove.
Movies that do a great disservice to the spirit of the books (although makes piles of money) are the Harry Potter movies.
I thought the first couple of HP movies were very good, but the last one was total crap. There was so much missing that I couldn’t see how anyone could understand what was going on unless they’d read the book.
I have to disagree about The Hours, it was an excellent adaptation of the book. However, you’re definitely correct that it is depressing as all hell.
I had no idea they were making The Giver into a movie!!! This is my favorite book of all time, so my GOD I hope they don’t screw it up royally. But I think you’re right, I think it will be a difficult transition to the screen. It will probably flop if they can’t find and interesting visual way to show Jonas’s thoughts and transformation.
Also, I seriously think The Road will be a terrible movie. I have no desire to see it at all. And i can’t stand that Viggo guy. However, the Cohen brothers did an excellent job putting No Country for Old Men on the screen.
It’s always interesting to see how the books are translated to the screen.
oh, I never read The Hours. I was saying I wish they hadn’t made it into a movie… lol. It ruined my ever wanting to read Woolfe.
I had been surprised that No Country had been done by the Cohen Brothers. It was so different from their usual style that it impressed me.
Oh no. I did not know about The Giver. Oh no. I cannot even imagine, I’m just…speechless.
I loved The Hours. Those were the times that I eagerly read books before the movie and with this one, I started with Mrs. Dalloway, THEN read The Hours then saw the movie and loved the entire process. I am re-reading Mrs. Dalloway right now. For books, I hate to know too much for in this case, I am so glad I read the book first and think they did a wonderful job with the adaption.
I also loved the Hours – book AND movie. It was depressing, yes, but very well done. I am amazed that a man can write women so well.