Larry
Lieutenant Commander
Posts: 144
Joined: Wed Nov 13, 2013 3:12 pm
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First I'm going to concur with everyone that said TV series. The stories are continuing arcs that need that room to be told. A movie won't do it, it needs more time.
I disagree with everyone that said it can't be done for a book containing so much thinking or so many characters. Game of Thrones proves that's untrue. However, it's also true that the series (or movies if you really insist) would certainly not be identical to the books. As far better analysts of the creative arts than I have pointed out, different media require a different interpretation of the story line. To recast the books into a movie might require telling the story from a different perspective. Not giving all the background, abbreviating some of the infodumps (or eliminating them entirely) and playing up the action. Viewers, as opposed to readers, want to see things happen, receive good dialogue, watch plots advance and characters develop. One of my favorite movies "The Longest Day" doesn't bore me with long solicitations about the height advantage of the hardpoint the Germans set up at the casino, or specs on the guns, or muzzle velocity of American destroyer navel guns. It shows desperate men in battle, the difficulty of the assault with dead bodies, and the actions of brave men to overcome them, I don't need the stats on the Bangalore torpedo that blows the hole in the German defense to allow the Americans to get off the beach, I just need it to go boom, and let the action flow. Don't give the details on Merlin's guns, just let me see him shooting down inquisitors as he allows Irys, Lord Ahzgood, Daivyn and the rest of their party to escape. Don't tell me about the new sail plan or the new ship, just put the model of the damn thing on the screen and make it sail. I'll be able to tell it's not the same as the other ship. Stop telling me how clever everyone is and instead tell the story. Simplify, simplify, simplify. So can it be done? I say yes. but it won't be the same as the books so the purists won't like it. Oh and I suspect David won't either. Our author spends a lot of time getting the numbers right and worrying out the details. He's fond of them and he should be, they represent a lot of hard work and research. But they don't matter a darn to a television production (or a movie) and I'm not sure he could let them go. And that might just be the biggest stumbling block to ever seeing the books on the big screen. Well that and finding anyone willing to put up the megabucks required to finance it.
And that's my two pfennigs for what it's worth.
Larry
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