Originally Posted by ThatDarnMKS (Post 2347627)
It's maddening that John Hillcoat apparently has a script that is approved by McCarthy and is ready to go but the rights holders say nay, as they'd rather pursue filmmakers like...
James Franco. At least that seems to have fallen apart. I thought James Franco was the rights holder since I he started making one some time during his, "make 60 movies a year," phase - or at least "had the movie rights." I remember he also got the movie rights to Zeroville during that time. I guess I'm unclear on the meaning of the specifics, or possibly what the specifics were. |
Originally Posted by ThatDarnMKS (Post 2347621)
This is why something like Let The Right One In is such a great adaptation (script from the original author, no less). It adopts an iceberg approach, catching glimpses of the novel's larger world (which would take a miniseries to fully render) but perfectly capturing the essence and important beats. It wouldn't be any greater with 6+ more hours just to go into Hakan's pedophilia, Eli's origin, or their detective neighbor's relationship with his son. It would probably feel a great deal lesser because fidelity would override what's best for it in it's new form.
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Originally Posted by Little Ash (Post 2347664)
I thought James Franco was the rights holder since I he started making one some time during his, "make 60 movies a year," phase - or at least "had the movie rights."
I remember he also got the movie rights to Zeroville during that time. I guess I'm unclear on the meaning of the specifics, or possibly what the specifics were. |
Originally Posted by pahaK (Post 2347681)
Let the Right One In is my go-to film when discussing good book adaptations. It's faithful but also cognizant of the differences between the two media. For me, wanting more faithful adaptations means wanting more adaptations like that... and I want more faithful adaptations as I'm pissed off by the films that advertise themselves as adaptations but, in truth, use only some familiar names as a dressing (like almost everything based on IPs controlled by Paradox).
However, just to contradict myself, that approach has rendered its own masterpieces from Frankenstein to Children of Men. |
I'd like to see all the Dean Koontz Odd Thomas novels turned into movies besides just the first one.
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Re: Books you really want to see turned into FAITHFUL movies
I'd like to see most of Milan Kundera's books made into movies. They have already made a movie of The Unbearable Lightness of Being, but I would like them to tackle several of his other works, such as: Immortality, The Joke, and The Book of Laughter and Forgetting. Kundera's style of writing would probably pose a challenge to adapting any of his novels including Unbearable Lightness, but his stories are good and he always leaves you with something to think about.
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Re: Books you really want to see turned into FAITHFUL movies
Still waiting for King/Straub's The Talisman.
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Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2374152)
I'd like to see most of Milan Kundera's books made into movies. They have already made a movie of The Unbearable Lightness of Being, but I would like them to tackle several of his other works, such as: Immortality, The Joke, and The Book of Laughter and Forgetting. Kundera's style of writing would probably pose a challenge to adapting any of his novels including Unbearable Lightness, but his stories are good and he always leaves you with something to think about.
Pretty sure am adaptation of The Joke was made during the Czech New Wabey |
Originally Posted by crumbsroom (Post 2374201)
Pretty sure am adaptation of The Joke was made during the Czech New Wabey
I read that it had been released about fifteen minutes after I made my post. Milan Kundera did the screenplay himself. It is available from Criterion with 4 other Czheck new Wave Films. |
Re: Books you really want to see turned into FAITHFUL movies
Casting is often crucial for a cinematic rendition of a book. My pick: Cormac McCarthy's Suttree -- but non-negotiable, it would have to star David Morse in the lead role.
https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/i...lbEAA&usqp=CAU |
Originally Posted by crumbsroom (Post 2374201)
Pretty sure am adaptation of The Joke was made during the Czech New Wabey
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Originally Posted by Wyldesyde19 (Post 2374273)
Czech New Wave.
I think I made it very clear I was talking about the Czech New Wabey. |
Originally Posted by crumbsroom (Post 2374274)
I think I made it very clear I was talking about the Czech New Wabey.
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Originally Posted by crumbsroom (Post 2374201)
Czech New Wabey
https://i.imgur.com/dUMdfjq.png https://i.imgur.com/M8aBzDh.png https://i.imgur.com/2HOFEMF.png https://i.imgur.com/wGs1e7m.png https://i.imgur.com/MzpTknQ.png . |
Re: Books you really want to see turned into FAITHFUL movies
The first pic she looks a lot like Leah Remini
https://i.imgur.com/dUMdfjq.png |
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