I think its all a matter of perspective. While I love the LOTR movies some of
my favourite parts of the books were not in the movies, but that didn't make
them anyless enjoyable if a let the books be the books and the movies be the
movies, and try not to compare them too closely.
It's like trying to compare real boobs and fake boobs (sorry ladies) they might
appear the same, people might say they are the same, but from different
perspectives (from person to person) they are not the same and some people will
be put off by them.
This is probably the worst analogy i've ever given (if i broke any rules sorry)
but I hope you get the point.
> Subject: Re: Midkemia on tv
> From: [email protected]
> Date: Tue, 17 Apr 2012 22:13:05 -0400
> To: [email protected]
>
> Fair, but it's disappointing to see something you cherish as a reader turned
> into something so awful. Imagine if they made Pug Borric's bastard. Ok, fine,
> probably not the end of the world, but when they took Goodkind's very best
> work and gutted the stories it was like looking at a Jackson Pollock version
> of a scene instead of a Vermeer. Nothing wrong with Pollock, but it sure as
> hell doesn't look like anything resembling reality. It would be like someone
> making the Valerhu into care bears, the elves into monsters and Pug into a
> powerless barkeep with a thing for strange older women. Yes, that might be
> enjoyable television but it would a crap tv reproduction of your great works.
> I actually think goodkind was embarrassed by the series. It was really that
> bad.
>
> On Apr 17, 2012, at 6:28 PM, "Raymond E. Feist" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >
> > On Apr 17, 2012, at 2:59 PM, Strider1974 wrote:
> >
> >> I personally never understood the la-la land mentality that seems to go
> >> like
> >>
> >> OK, we have the rights to this book but it is obvious that we know way
> >> better than the author how this should be done. So we will completely
> >> change the substance of the characters and the tone of book and make
> >> something completely different.
> >>
> >> For some reason they don't feel that that they need the fans to watch/buy
> >> the movie/TV show etc or that these fans are not going to jump on the
> >> internet and trash the production to everyone they can. I get that when
> >> changing the story format from print to live action that changes have to
> >> be made, but in my view there is never a reason to change the tone of the
> >> story or the substance of the characters. The recent productions of Terry
> >> Practchett's books and Game Of Thrones is proof of how wrong this attitude
> >> can be.
> >>
> >> Michael
> >
> >
> > Again I don't mean to imply that people who don't know how film making
> > works are stupid, but rather that ignorance of how an industry works can
> > lead to some very erroneous assumptions.
> >
> > "We know way better than the author how this should be done." Well, ya.
> > Otherwise the author would be a film maker and not a novelist.
> >
> > No one sets out to make a bad film or a bad TV show. Really. There are some
> > seriously fringy bits like Troma and the films of Fred Olin Ray that are
> > sort of in an "Ed Woods-ish" category all by themselves. John Waters, too,
> > but he's more mainstream. But there are people who can't stand Quintin
> > Tarrantino's or Tim Burton's films.
> >
> > So assume you've got a mainstream company. They often make choices that are
> > about what audience they're shooting for, or what the realistic running
> > time for the film is, or any of a dozen other reasons. You can have a
> > screenwriter who read the book and said, "I really like this bit over here,
> > but we need to lose that thing over there, and it works better if the two
> > lads aren't friendly rivals, but bitter enemies. . . " Your milage may
> > vary. Lord of the Rings, the Fellowship is a good example of a bit that
> > improves it. In the book, Aragorn makes a choice to follow Pippin & Merry
> > that makes no sense, given Frodo is the ring bearer and needs protection.
> > In the movie they have an interaction where Frodo convinces Aragorn it's a
> > better choice if he and Sam sneak in so he should go save the pair. It is a
> > small improvement, but it is better writing.
> >
> > Sometimes the train flies off the tracks and you end up with something that
> > just makes no sense at all. Alan E. Nourse sold his story The Bladrunner to
> > the studio because they wanted a cool title for Philip K. Dick's "Do
> > Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?" So, what he saw on the screen looked
> > nothing like his story. Philip Dick's story was changed radically in
> > places, but it's still a hell of a film.
> >
> > And sometimes studios do things for specific reasons.
> >
> > You just never know.
> >
> > The only way to look at it is what Kingsley Amis said after the premier of
> > the film based on his first book, Lucky Jim. A lady friend said after, "Oh,
> > you poor dear. What horrible things they did to your book." His reply:
> > "Why, nonsense. Not one word on the page of my book has changed." It was
> > actually a decent film; it just wasn't his book.
> >
> > Best, R E.F.
> >
> >
> > ----
> > www.crydee.com
> >
> > Never attribute to malice what can satisfactorily be explained away by
> > stupidity.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
>