Breumaster's profile

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Sunday, September 13th, 2020 1:06 AM

Live-Poll: Unfilmable

Intro:

 

There have always been books which forced the impression to be unfilmable. But then some producers, directors, actors came and showed that the stuff is not unfilmable. We all know that the 'Lord of the Rings'-franchise is one of these "so-to-say" big unfilmable stuff, but at the end it became a highly acclaimed movie series.

Which of these movies that seemed to be unfilmable rocked it the most? Tell us here.

 

Rules:

 

Please count real-life action, No animated, no movies with lower rating of 5.5/10

 

List: https://www.imdb.com/list/ls083724003/

 

Poll:

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4 years ago

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Bo:

 

Thank you. I've put your suggestions on the list. :D

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4 years ago

@Breumaster,

 

For your consideration:

Foundation (2021– ) is based on Isaac Asimov's Foundation Series:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foundation_series

As a longtime fan of Isaac Asimov, many other Asimov fans and I consider the series to be fundamentally unfilmable. The events of the novels occur over a period of 30,000 years. The novels are dominated by extended philosophical dialogue with very little action.

 

I personally fear that substance of the novels will not be reflected in the limited television series. Since  Isaac Asimov's daughter, Robyn Asimov is an executive producer producer for the series, I hope that the series will be respectful of the source material.

 

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Thank you Dan. :D

 

I added it to the list, but have to do some edits in the intro, because it's released in future.

That can become interesting.

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@Breumaster,

 

Thank you for adding Foundation (2021– ).

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4 years ago

This time, I let the profile-links of the users away, because when anyone wants to visit one of the suggesters, he can search through my 80 first polls, I linked in my profile.

(edited)

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4 years ago

@Breumaster,

 

For you consideration:

Game of Thrones (2011–2019)

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0944947/trivia?item=tr3566660

Writer George R.R. Martin was approached several times with plans to adapt his (still unfinished) book series "A Song of Ice and Fire" into a movie, but he rejected them all, as he thought his books were much too expansive to be made into a movie. When David Benioff and D.B. Weiss told him that they wanted to make a series out of it, he asked them who they thought Jon Snow's mother could be. Satisfied with the answer, he agreed to sell the rights to the book.

 

https://www.bustle.com/articles/138322-how-did-game-of-thrones-become-a-tv-show-george-rr-martin-tried-to-write-an

... It almost didn't, actually. Unlike most authors, who cross their fingers and hope Hollywood will want to adapt their novel so they can sell the rights for a fat seven-figure deal, George R.R. Martin set out to write A Song Of Ice And Fire actively wishing that no one would want to touch it. Before he started work on his multi-volume epic, Martin was working as a TV writer, scripting episodes for The Twilight Zone and then Beauty And The Beast on CBS. It was his experience working for the small screen that made him want to write an "unfilmable" novel in the first place. ...

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Dan:

 

Added. :D

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@Breumaster,

 

I remember a colleague at work telling me that George R.R. Martin considered his series of books Song Of Ice And Fire unfilmable. I asked him what he thought of Game of Thrones since he was reading one of the books in the series. Honestly, I expected urbanemovies to make this suggestion.

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I thought about it, but eliminated it as an option since the scope of the poll suggestion is movies.
 
I can't even imagine a single book of the A Song of Ice and Fire series being adapted into a film. The stories are far too too complex, these adaptations are better served by becoming mini-series and even then only under the right circumstances. If it had been adapted as a film it would have suffered the same fate as Dune (1984) and would have been a total train wreck.
 
Likewise, I wonder what type series it would have been if it hadn't been shepherded by David Benioff and D. B. Weiss and made for a network with the financial might and vision as HBO. George R.R. Martin wrote a great book series and was justified in his fears, if adapted it would have been butchered.  If not for the star aligning in its favor, the series would have been a shell of what it became to be.

(edited)

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4 years ago

Great idea, Breu! 

 

May I suggest a few small edit? (below in bold)

 

There have always been books which forced the impression to be unfilmable. But then some producers, directors, and actors came and showed that the stuff is not unfilmable. We all know that the 'Lord of the Rings' franchise was one of these "so-to-say" big unfilmable ideas, but at the end it became a highly acclaimed movie series.

I'd suggest replacing "actors" with "writers." I don't know how much actors really have to do with it but writers are essential at that stage and to adapt an "unfilmable" book or concept to the screen. Also, I'd probably remove "smaller" from the question? Several of the options are pretty big movies and concepts, too. 

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ruby:

 

Thank you, I did all the improvements you suggested. :D

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4 years ago

Oh, FYC: Jaws! It took Spielberg so long to convince someone that he could do it and, ultimately, it was so close to never being made.  The mechanical shark wouldn't work and the production went way over budget and way over time -- well, I'm sure you know the story -- for the 1970s, it was an incredibly ambitious project that almost everyone said it was doomed from the start. 

 

Another FYC: The Invisible Man (2020)

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ruby:

 

Jaws (1975) and The Invisible Man (2020) are on the list now. :D

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4 years ago

FYC: Ulysses (1967) based on James Joyce novel

Catch-22 (1970)

Naked Lunch (1991)

 

Source for the three above

 

Since you are including upcoming projects, there seems to be an upcoming tv series on 100 años de soledad Probably the best novel on Latin American magical realism, but that it certainly is difficult to put on the screen.

 

Also Tristam Shandy - Source

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@Pencho15 

 

Of course. Thank you, pencho. I've put your suggestions on the list. :D

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4 years ago

I finally re-arranged the order of the options a little. Ready to go.

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4 years ago

FYC: Life of Pi

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@Peter_pbn 

 

Hi, Peter. It was just a little late yesterday, because I was on my way to work,

when your suggestion arrived. I've put it on the list. Thank you for suggesting.

It's a very good suggestion I knew, but didn't think of. :D

(edited)

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4 years ago

Congratulations, @Breumaster!

Unfilmable

Live Poll: https://www.imdb.com/poll/zwJJaGKcR5Q/

 

 

Please change "Poll Suggestion" to "Live Poll" in the discussion thread title and change the settings so that it appears under "Praise" now, rather than "Idea."

 

FAQ: Updating Threads After Poll Goes Live

 

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@dan_dassow :

 

Thank you & Buddies! :D

I changed it to Live-Poll & Praise. Sorry, it took some time, because I was at work. ;)

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4 years ago

Not very good options.  From reading the book, some seemed perfectly simple to film, in particular the two in the lead.  Jaws and The Shining.   Neverending Story felt like watching a film when i was reading it, so was also perfect for adaptation.

EDIT:  Having read the comments, i see that some people have suggested books due to the number of characters or locations, or even difficulty sourcing set/design factors.
   I was thinking more of the complexity of the narrative and difficulty in transferring concepts to the screen.  For which my own recommendations would be The English Patient (don't bother reading it), and American Psycho.

For those that have read the book of Perfume (which is quite difficult in itself), a film adaptation seemed a very great task.  

(edited)

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60 Points

3 years ago

How about A Clockwork Orange? From critic Simon Braund:

Ethical screed aside, what does A Clockwork Orange have to offer beyond its curiosity value and a crash course in humanism? Well, for a start there's Kubrick's dazzling visual style which, rather in the manner that Trainspotting did 25 years later, translates the substance of an "unfilmable" book into the language of cinema.