I was
twelve years old when I first got my hands on the Thomas Harris book, The
Silence of the Lambs. It was my school
speech day prize on account of being the class nerd and I devoured it faster
than Lecter would a meal served with a Fava bean and Chianti
accompaniment. I was to wait another
year before I finally saw the movie, after convincing my mother that it was
safe to let me watch it because I had already read the book and knew what
happened. She however, had not. Whilst remaining unconvinced, she relented as
a holiday treat as I encouraged her with suggestions that ‘it wasn’t really
that bad’. As the film started I sat
glued to a ten inch wall mounted television as we both sat propped up on our
shared hotel room bed. I sat there
watching the imprisonment and eventual escape of a man who visited my dreams
for many of the following nights, and my mother sat there clearly wondering if
she would ever be able to undo the irrevocable damage that she had unwittingly
allowed to occur. I too was scared
stiff, and considered an attempt to turn it off in a display of near-teenage disinterest. But I knew that I couldn’t muster such a
credible performance and so instead sat there terrified to the end, possibly,
but questionably, more so than my mother.
Honestly, I had enjoyed every single flesh eating second of it.
It was indeed a grand moment in my book to
screen adaptation education. One of the
first screen adaptations that I ever watched was lavished with not one, but
five Academy Awards and remains regarded as one of the best movies ever
made. The book was celebrated. The movie was celebrated. All round success. Yet Demme’s directorial interpretation was
far from a carbon copy of the novel. So
why is it that whilst we consider this adaptation with such high regard,
another we will toss back into the bargain bin before the credits have even had
the chance to roll?
There is a
huge difference is creating an image through written words and description, and
creating something visual. The smallest
of well written descriptions can result in a whole scenario in the readers
mind, and ultimately what is created is something that the reader finds
individually satisfying. You could take
ten readers of the same passage and ask them to draw out an interpretation, and
each would undoubtedly be different. Our
own interpretation follows our own rules because the image is
internalized. Once this process is
complete, the director of any subsequent screen adaptation has to fight against
the imaginary images already created. An
exception could perhaps be a work so detailed, such as that by Tolkien where
there are so many details that the reader and director have no choice but to
follow the same path.
The
director also has to decide on what details to leave out, or whether to include
everything. Whilst reading Captain
Corelli’s Mandolin, I completed a whole first chapter which concerned itself
with no more than the extraction of a pea from an ear. Chapters and chapters passed by before I had
even been introduced to the mysterious Corelli.
But yet when I sat down to watch the screen adaptation these characters
from the beginning of the novel make little or no appearance in the movie. Their importance is whittled down to nothing
more than a passing mention, or worse still, their whole personality is
changed.
So what is
a director to do? If they try to remain
faithful to the original story it can begin to feel like an exercise in ticking
boxes and a two hour run through at break-neck speed. Alternatively, the film would be unbearably
long and indeed, should this have been the approach of John Madden in his
attempt to direct Captain Corelli’s Mandolin, the movie would have carried an advisory
notice for those with a predisposition to the development of DVT. Taking this same example, the drastically
simplified plot of the screen adaptation managed to reduce a series of complex
and thoughtful personalities into a cast of threadbare characters that I really
didn’t care much about. The central
element regarding the love between Corelli and Pelagia was so stripped of its
depth and detail that the idea that she would have fallen in love with him
almost seemed ridiculous, to the point that when an alternative and more emotionally
agreeable happily ever after conclusion that I had hoped for throughout the
last quarter of the book actually happened, I really couldn’t have cared less,
and instead found myself wishing that she had turned around and told him to hop
back onto the nearest boat and head in the direction of the Adriatic Sea.
So perhaps
if you read a book and love it, seeing the movie will be an inevitable disappointment
if you are looking for the same experience.
Should we expect the same from a two hour visual representation of a
text that takes us at least four times that to read? I for one should certainly have seen it
coming when I eagerly sat down to watch Captain Corelli’s Mandolin. So rather than reverting to the idea that
books shouldn’t be made into movies, or berating them when we see a less than
faithful adaptation of one of our favourite books, perhaps it is time to stop
making comparisons. Instead, we should
open our eyes to the idea of enjoying different media in the form it was
intended, and judge each interpretation on its own merits and failings rather
than trying to force it to adhere to the rules of another.
I really like watching books that have become movies after reading them. I like trying to figure out the best parts of both. The greatest reward is when they both make you think of something you hadn't before and show sides not depicted by the other one. This is the case with my favorite books and top favorite movies. Jurassic Park and Tuck Everlasting. Both movies are very different from their book counterparts but all are very incredible to me and I wouldn't pick one over the other. I don't know if I even could. Interesting post!!!
ReplyDeleteThanks! I always felt the movie versions let me down, and that things were missing. But I always started watching the movies with the idea that it had to be the same as the book, and if it wasn't, it had to be a failure. Now I am trying to accept that books are books, and movies are movies, and enjoy each as they are! Thanks for your comments, I am glad you enjoyed the post!
DeleteFor my own tastes, I think it has to do with respecting the source material more than anything. Second to that, respecting those who turned a book into a success is equally important. If the director/production team loves the book, it shows. Still, there are plenty who respect the source so much that they can't allow it any room to breathe or grow. It's unfortunate when that happens because it can take away from the joy of seeing characters that existed on the page and in one's mind come to life.
ReplyDeleteNice points, well made. I agree it is good to respect the source material, but not to be so afraid to deviate if it needs it. What do you envisage being cut from an adaptation of Troubled Souls?
DeleteI'm holding out for the musical. ;)
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