Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
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Has there ever been a movie BETTER than the book?



Although I haven't read the book, I've heard Blade Runner is considerably better than Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep?
Oh, and Great Expectations. Alfonso Cuarón's film is one of my all time favorites, but I've started to read the Dicken's novel several times only to abandon it because it's. Such. A. Bore.






The Lord of the Rings (but there is NO WAY IN **** you can get me to read/watch The Hobbit...horrible thing)
I liked the movie version of The Hobbit better. It fixed a lot of the issues I had with the book. Not sure splitting it into three movies was a good idea.
Tolkien seems to greatly improve with the recent movies. I like Tolkien, but his pacing, lack of characterization of most characters, and inability to write fight scenes frustrate the hell out of me when I read him.

Absolutely agree with that.


The Road: No puncuation at all in the book and you had to reread lines to figure out who started a conversation.
Robinson Crusoe (with P. Brosnan): In the first of the book I heard three times about the doe goat and kid and bee's wax candles. And the simplest thing: Yesterday said "Many men come on big boat" and then Defoe broke that down so we could understand it. "Many men will arrive on a ship".


Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead was far better as a movie than as a play. In the play, a sad and defeated little boy, about eleven years old, is offered sexually to the two title characters. They changed that for the movie.

Out of Africa
The Long Goodbye
These are both favorite books of mine as well, but the films are told also by master story tellers who not only comprehend the source, but add to it.
Out of Africa is epic as a film. The visuals of any African story can outstrip the rest of the text and if for no other reason, OofA has magnificent shot from the air scenes that enrich the story in a way that few writers will ever equal.
The Long Goodbye is a film to watch uncut, unedited, uninterrupted and in a darkened room. Its pacing, dialogue, settings, and business(as in stage business) are superb. It is a chase movie as well as a mystery story and uses many unexpected elements to their fullest extent including low key, but deadly, obsession.
Both books have at least slightly different story lines and or outcomes. But not enough to be radically different. The filmmakers in both instances knew their business so well that the stories are not only faithful to the original but richer and ultimately more satisfying.
The books and the films in these two cases are truly complimentary of each other.

I liked them equally, which led me to the conclusion that the more I love a book, the more potential the movie has to disappoint me. I love the Harry Potter books much more, and though the movies were fun and all, they just don't reach the quality of the books. Not so with "The Hunger Games," though.


I think you'll find yourself very much in the minority with that opinion. I'll agree that the special effects in the movie made scenes like Diagon Alley and such better than I could have imagined, but the dialogue didn't measure up to the books.

However, the book and movie of 'War Horse' are on a par, as far as I'm concerned - neither were very enjoyable.
Other movies based on books are generally not equal to the books.

Also for me Hunger Games is better and the last book, Ugh! The movie has to be better!
JK Rowling is not a great grammarian, but she is awesome with Characterization, Story, and structure. I would rather read a great story with so-so grammar, than a so--so story with great grammar.

I agree.
I must disagree with the Hunger Games. I was a little let down with the film, and especially Jennifer Lawrence's acting. I loved her in X-Men, and was super stoked when she got cast as Katniss, but she just... didn't feel like Katniss to me. She had zero chemistry with Hutcherson on-screen (they act like BFF's in real life, so why couldn't that transfer into the movie?).
I dunno. I'm seriously hoping Catching Fire will be much better, but then again I re-read the Hunger Games recently and the writing was pretty poor.
--
I've actually read all the Twilight books (I hated it), and the movies were all garbage. I could have made a better movie than that bullcrap called Breaking Dawn. Seriously. It was awful and painful to watch. I found myself taking out my phone in the middle of the film to check the time.
Actually, all the Twilight films were awful. The books weren't much better, but they were a bit easier to endure.
I dunno. I'm seriously hoping Catching Fire will be much better, but then again I re-read the Hunger Games recently and the writing was pretty poor.
--
I've actually read all the Twilight books (I hated it), and the movies were all garbage. I could have made a better movie than that bullcrap called Breaking Dawn. Seriously. It was awful and painful to watch. I found myself taking out my phone in the middle of the film to check the time.
Actually, all the Twilight films were awful. The books weren't much better, but they were a bit easier to endure.



Person - *watches movie* "Wow! That was amazing!"
Me - "You should read the book then! The book is way ..."
THIS.


Dead on.





There's also one other book that I know of, but I can never remember what it is."
I actually think the Narnia books are much better than the movies -- but that's interesting, that you think the films are better.
I did totally love how they did the Eustace/ Reepicheep relationship in the third movie -- that was actually "better" than the book. But other things were worse, and still more just the same.
They were good movies, on the whole.
I wish you could remember what that other book was -- I'd be interested to hear.
(As for me, I think the Flambards series was a little bit better than the book -- but just a little).


Person - *watches movie* "Wow! That was amazing!"
Me - "You should read the book then! The book is way ..."
Happens ALL the time.

'bodies are where you find them.' admittedly, the book TITLE is awesome, but the book itself, not so much.

I haven't been able to get through the books, and that is sadly my own failing. So I was really excited when the movies came out!
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I thought the Bridge to Terrabithia was rubbish. :/
The trailers and reviews made it out to be like the Narnia Chrinicles, but it was just their imagination. Really wish that they didn't advertise the film like that.