Films that are BETTER than the book?
Posted by: Mr Underhill on 27 August 2007
Picking up on:
quote:
Originally posted by Analogue:
The Davinci Code.
Not bad but i prefered the book.
Anyone nominate films that are better than the book?
My nomination would be Blade Runner. Although I enjoy Philip K. Dick I never really got into 'Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep'.
M
Posted on: 16 September 2007 by acad tsunami
quote:
Originally posted by Christian Alshus:
Lord Of The Rings.
[QUOTE] The book was very good, but the movies were perhaps even better.
No offense but this is perhaps the daftest thing I have ever read on this forum.
Posted on: 16 September 2007 by acad tsunami
Gianluigi,
I thought Miss Smilla's feeling for snow was very well written but the ending was crap. I liked the film but only because I fancy Julia Ormond more than Monica Bellucci!
Posted on: 16 September 2007 by acad tsunami
The only film I can think of that was better than the book (Day of the Jackel comes very close imo)is
The Duellists - one of the finest films ever made imo.
Posted on: 16 September 2007 by Robert Woj
birdy , and music by gabriel is also one of my favorite soundtrack
Posted on: 17 September 2007 by Mr Underhill
quote:
Originally posted by acad tsunami:
Gianluigi,
I thought Miss Smilla's feeling for snow was very well written but the ending was crap. I liked the film but only because I fancy Julia Ormond more than Monica Bellucci!
Absolutely!
The first half was a contemplative and interesting piece of writing. The second half was like a poor Bond film.
M
Posted on: 17 September 2007 by Mr Underhill
quote:
Originally posted by munch:
All the Bond 007 films are better than the books IMO.
Mmmmmmm.
I really like the Bond films that had Saltzman as a co-producer, they have an edge; as does the recent Bond.
The books, for me, had that edge. From memory Fleming often 'killed' Bond at the end of a book. I think I would want to do it on a case by case by case basis, for instance I much preferred the book of 'The Man with the Golden Gun' to the film, even though the film had Christopher Lee.
M
Posted on: 17 September 2007 by Gianluigi Mazzorana
You're both right.
That time i bought the book because it was somehow taking me back to a certain danish atmosphere i was missing.
Reading "The history of Danish dreams" and "Borderliners" you have the sensation that Smilla's novel comes from another person.
Posted on: 01 November 2007 by jcs_smith
Trainspotting. Although they bear little resemblance to each other
Posted on: 05 November 2007 by Chris Kelly
The Bourne series with Matt Damon. I always found Ludlum's prose ponderous and a bit clunky.