• klemptor@startrek.website
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    6 days ago

    The movie version of A Clockwork Orange was based on the American version of the book, which left out the entire last chapter. In that chapter, at 18 years old Alex pretty suddenly grows out of his violent and criminal ways and wants to start a family. Some say this ending is more optimistic but I actually think it’s darker, because it shows that any normal person you meet might’ve at some point been a wanton brute reveling in the chaos and pain they so arbitrarily inflicted. And that they can just move on and start living like a normal person.

  • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I know we’re not into Harry Potter now, but the past is the past and I can’t forget how annoyed I was when the movie based on the third book, Prisoner of Azkaban, came out. I was a very disappointed teenager.

    It was a whirlwind story to me at the time. I remember exactly where I was when I read it, as the moment that revealed the friendship between Harry’s father James, Professor Lupin, Peter Pettigrew, and the alleged-murderer, Sirius Black, became seared into my brain. It was such a pivotal part of the overall story to me, that that twist alone made it my favorite in the series. So when the movie came out, I expected the use and development of The Marauder’s Map to be a key highlight. It was a huge deal in the books, after all.

    Yet in the movie, the map is just a neat thing Harry gets to use. Nobody mentions that Harry’s own father helped create it. The movie never even tells who the Marauders are, even though the reveal of their backstory was the key emotional crux of the Shrieking Shack scene. To omit their story entirely felt like a gut-punch.

    I didn’t understand at the time why the director (Alfonso Cuaron) decided to straight-up change everything that made that story so compelling to me and my friends. To this day, I still don’t understand.

    • FreshParsnip@lemmy.caOP
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      7 days ago

      Yet subsequent movies mentioned the nicknames Wormtail and Padfoot. A lot of things in the films must have been confusing to people who didn’t read the books. Another weird thing I’ve noticed is that in the fourth movie, Barty Crouch Jr steals from Snape to make polyjuice potion and he blames Harry. But those who only watched the movies and didn’t read the books wouldn’t have known that Harry and his friends stole from Snape to make polyjuice potion before.

  • DJKJuicy@sh.itjust.works
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    7 days ago

    Stephen King - Dreamcatcher

    In the book the character Duddits had the shining, yes that motherfucking shining.

    In the movie they made him an undercover alien. Man what a let down.

  • Kit@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    7 days ago

    The book Annihilation centered on a “tower” that was a mysterious, fleshy, downward spiraling tunnel with creepy writing on the walls. The imagery was so unsettling.

    For some reason it is entirely absent from the movie. Like… that was half of the point of the book - a “tower” that climbed down into the earth instead of towards the sky. Why would you cut that?

  • xylogx@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Ready Player One. So much about the movie adaptation of this book infuriates me, but the fact they replaced Wargames with the Shining is a crime against humanity!!!

  • DarkFuture@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    I Am Legend

    The ending was completely and utterly different than the book, which destroyed the gut punch at the end of the book that was kind of the whole theme of the book.

    I don’t even remember the book as a whole. But I remember the ending. Then they Hollywooded it and it was awful.

  • rmuk@feddit.uk
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    6 days ago

    The Lawnmower Man

    In the book, an unassuming everyman stumbles upon the fact that a local landscaping company is actually a front for a demon who has an arrangement that involves making human sacrifices of those that discover his supernatural nature.

    In the movie, a Cyber Virtual Reality 3D Battles ON 3D CYBERSPACE Stunning Effects 3D Internet Pierce Brosnan Warfare Nineties Futuristic VR Headset Technology BATTLE In 3D Mind Expanding Guns, and one of the characters is a man who has a lawnmower.

    Edit: Shit, okay, I just read this on Wikipedia and nearly wet myself:

    A feature film, The Lawnmower Man, starring Jeff Fahey and Pierce Brosnan, was released in 1992 by New Line Cinema. This film used an original screenplay entitled “CyberGod”, borrowing only the title of the short story. The film concerns a scientist, Dr. Lawrence Angelo (Brosnan), who subjects mentally challenged Jobe Smith (Fahey) to virtual reality experiments which give him superhuman abilities. The film was originally titled Stephen King’s The Lawnmower Man. King won a lawsuit to have his name removed from the film, stating in court documents that the film “bore no meaningful resemblance” to his story. King then won further damages in 1993 after his name was included in the home video release.

  • ramsgrl909@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    The Dark Tower. Everything. An 8 book series smashed into 1 terrible movie. Who ever green lit that should be fired.

  • stringere@sh.itjust.works
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    6 days ago

    Dune.

    Turning the Bene Gesserit power of Voice into some weird gun was fucking stupid.

    Edit to add: first film adaptation from the 80s. The latest movies have been good.

    • DarkFuture@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Yeah, the 80s version took a lot of liberties, most of which didn’t work out. The ending specifically.

      But I still like the visuals and the music and the actors more than the new movies. Yeah, I know the new ones have crazy CG visuals, but the set designs from the 80s version were just more…unique in my opinion. That made the world feel more interesting. And I liked the 80s Baron way more than the new Baron, despite really respecting Stellan Skarsgard. Kenneth McMillan played a really psychotic Baron.

    • rabidhamster@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      6 days ago

      As a Dune lover, I have a soft spot for the 1980s version. The thing I tell people before watching is, “this isn’t Dune, this is a fever dream David Lynch had about the idea of Dune.”

        • AwesomeLowlander@sh.itjust.works
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          6 days ago

          I mean, how was it different in the movie? As I recall it was still a vocal thing. They could have done a better job explaining where it came from but I don’t remember it being egregiously different.

          • stringere@sh.itjust.works
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            6 days ago

            Voice is not a weapon like a gun or knife. Voice commands people. It’s like speed hypnosis/mind control achieved through voice manipulation.

            • AwesomeLowlander@sh.itjust.works
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              6 days ago

              Like I said, I don’t really remember instances in the movie of the voice being used in a way inconsistent with that description. I’m not arguing, I’m asking for examples to jog my memory.

  • J92@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    I was surprised when I read heart of darkness, that, for me at least, the final gut-punch of the tale isn’t a dying man thinking of the horror he had wrought and seen, but the protagonist getting back to the man’s wife and lying to her, telling her his last thoughts were of her. It isnt something that would have worked for Apocalypse Now, but I didn’t expect such a short novel to hide a completely different ending mood. I still think about it, years later.

    • Plum@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      WTF was that movie? Did they buy the rights to the title, but not the content?

    • Davel23@fedia.io
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      8 days ago

      The best part of that movie is Peter Capaldi being listed as “W.H.O. Doctor” in the credits.

    • baldingpudenda@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      Can you imagine a mockumentary with photos, reenactments, Redeker interview, military helicopters recording a supply drop following the redeker plan and thankful survivors, a historian explaining the Pakistan India war, live head cam footage of the Battle of Yonkers as that soldier retells his experince. It ends with some Drill Instructor explaining the box formation and taking your time with shots. Cuts to a drone going up and showing survivors in formation and hundreds of zombies in a large circle around them.

    • Drusas@fedia.io
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      8 days ago

      Much like there has been no Dark Tower movie, there has also been no World War Z movie.

      They don’t count.

      • Visstix@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        I really liked the audiobook form. The story is basically told through an interviewer asking people what they experienced and the audiobook has different voice actors for all the characters.

        • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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          8 days ago

          The audiobook was good except for the Chinese characters. For some insane reason they decided to have white voice actors do a bad Chinese accent instead of just hiring actual Chinese voice actors.

      • magnetosphere@fedia.io
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        8 days ago

        The movie isn’t very interesting, but it’s not outright bad - unless you were hoping for a faithful adaptation. The book has a MUCH more interesting storyline.

    • Ziggurat@jlai.lu
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      8 days ago

      When they announced a movie with Brad Pitt, I knew it would be bad. The book reads like a multi épisode TV show without a main character (and it could be a great adaptation).

      When I pirated the movie version… It was so bad I regretted wasting bandwidth for that

      • HuskerNation@lemmy.zip
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        8 days ago

        Loved the book. When I first watched the movie I hated it. as a movie by itself it’s ok, sort of free on me. But then I thought the movie works if you treat it as a prequel

    • frank@sopuli.xyz
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      8 days ago

      Oooo as someone who has seen the movie and never read the book, any sales pitch for me for the book?

      • just2look@lemmy.zip
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        8 days ago

        The book is wonderfully written, and actually fairly insightful from a disaster preparedness and policy standpoint. It’s been a while since a read it so forgive me if the details aren’t exactly correct. Its written from the viewpoint of a journalist traveling the world post zombie apocalypse. He is collecting stories from survivors of various major events that happened during the zombie outbreak. Each chapter details a different event conveyed by a different witness, so it’s not a cohesive single plot story. More like working notes of someone preparing to write a history of a major global disaster. It highlights some of the mistakes made and lessons learned as events unfolded.

        • jaaake@lemmy.world
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          8 days ago

          The audiobook is also quite good. It’s fully cast, so each section is voiced by a new actor who writes the letters in the collection.

      • Fondots@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        Imagine the book as almost a Ken Burns style documentary made after the zombie war, going back and interviewing the people who were there and lived through it collecting their stories.

        It’s been a while since I read it, but each chapter is a different person being interviewed telling their story, more or less in chronological order. The stories don’t really overlap directly with each other, but together they paint a great overall picture of the war from start to finish.

        And it’s a good cross section of different people, soldiers, scientists, ordinary people, an astronaut who was stranded on the ISS for the duration of the war, etc.

        I think everyone who read the book really wants it to be picked up as a mockumentary miniseries in that sort of style with “archival” footage with people being interviewed giving voiceovers and all the other usual documentary trappings.

        And the Zombie Survival Guide is also a fantastic companion to it that is basically done as a, well, survival guide, that was distributed during the war, and is referenced once or twice throughout WWZ

      • shalafi@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        You already got great responses. I’ll add that World War Z is a direct ripoff of Tom Brokaw’s The Greatest Generation. And I mean that in a good way.

    • Rose@slrpnk.net
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      8 days ago

      I should reread the book. It was hyped as a good book. It was a good book.

      Then I went to see the movie. Came out of the cinema and muttered “well that was a bunch of unrelated nonsense”. Went home.

    • njm1314@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      I think they would have gotten away with that movie if it wasn’t for the ending. Like yeah they completely destroyed the source material, but at least it’s possible to have an interesting movie. Except like the last freaking third of the movie is just boring. Crushingly boring.

  • JumpyWombat@lemmy.ml
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    8 days ago

    All the adaptations of I Am Legend are bad, but 2007 movie was insulting. It gave the illusion of following the book, but then did a u-tutn and completely changed the meaning of the story and the title itself.

    In the movie the protagonist becomes a legend because he sacrifices himself to cure vampirism.

    In the book he is the last man in a world of vampires, he kills vampires, and understands that he is like a legendary monster that kills people in their sleep. He is then executed.

    • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      8 days ago

      Yeah, the book vampires were much more fleshed out. In the movie they were just barely-sentient beasts, primarily running off of instinct. They only seemingly had some basic higher-level reasoning. His primary struggle was surviving while surrounded by bloodthirsty animals.

      In the book, they were a full blown society with their own culture. When the people around him changed, he was suddenly a stranger in a brand new culture. The point was that in the old society, vampires were the thing that went bump in the night. But in the new society, he was the monster that parents told their kids to watch out for.

    • Godnroc@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      In case you haven’t seen the alternate ending for I am Legend, it puts a very different perspective on the whole movie. Apparently it was the original, but didn’t screen well with viewers.

      The most telling moment for me is the infected slaps their hand on the glass and draws a butterfly as the last words the protagonist’s daughter ever said to him, “Daddy, look a the butterfly!” echo is his head and he realizes that the infected he has captured has a butterfly tattoo on her shoulder. He even makes a note of it in the capture and experimentation scene claiming that the infected exposing himself to sunlight is a sign that “social de-evolution is complete.” when instead the infected just witnessed a monster kidnap his daughter and drag her into a dangerous area that he cannot follow to do unknown experiments on her to change her into something else.

      Instead the ending negates everything built up to the point and ends with a boring action-movie cliche.

    • IWW4@lemmy.zip
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      7 days ago

      It gave the illusion of following the book.

      Have you actually read the short story? Because I am baffled as to how anyone who has read the story would say that.

      The movie was in no way an adaptation of the short story at all. It never even pretended to follow the short story.

      Just like iRobot the only thing I Am Legend has in common with it’s written work is the title.

      He is then executed.

      No he wasn’t. He committed suicide.

      • JumpyWombat@lemmy.ml
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        7 days ago

        Have you actually read the short story?

        Yes I did, probably 10 years before that 2007 movie. Let me recommend you to check an encyclopaedia if you want precision instead of reading a random forum online.

        He is then executed.

        No he wasn’t. He committed suicide.

        For what I remember he was in a jail cell ready to be executed and they offered him a pill. Anyway, that was not the point of the story.

      • Godnroc@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        As I recall it, he is locked in a room awaiting execution at the end of the book and while he is there he observes the vampires creating a spectacle out of his death which causes him to realize that he has been the boogeyman of their society - that he has become the stuff of legends.