A Game of Thrones
discussion
Game of thrones books way too similar to the show
message 1:
by
Emilie
(new)
-
rated it 5 stars
Mar 28, 2013 06:35PM

reply
|
flag



If it had strayed from the book, I can't imagine how bad it could have turned out. The Walking Dead would be a good example. While I do like the show on its own. But the side of me that read the comic is just mad at how things are going.

the first season was excellent and much more true to the text.
i have no idea why you'd attempt an adaptation if you weren't going to glean heavily from the original text.

When you're adapting a book with some good ideas, that fails to realize them, you have an interesting challenge, trying to shape a better story from your imperfect materials.
When you're working from a book as rich with effective characters, plots and writing as 'Game of Thrones' (or, e.g. 'Lord of the Rings'), your best hope is to capture as much of the books onscreen as you can. For every digression you added, you'd have to leave something better and more integral to George R. R. Martin's complex vision out.

i agree, and while the digressions were useful in the first season setting up characters, filling in back stories and history, creating dialogue from largely 3rd-person editorial narrative i felt that this approach was glaring and their omissions and edits were far too bold in some places in the second season.

And, if you watched Peter Jackson's first 'Hobbit' movie, you can see how the man who did such an ace job capturing the story and flavor of LOTR onscreen, is now more interested in developing his own ideas than realizing Tolkein's 'Hobbit'. But 'The Hobbit' is a much lesser book, and I think Jackson really wanted to squeeze three moneymakers out of it.

Bacon-loving libertarians = Others
Dinosaurs = Dragons
Spaceships = the Comet
WE'RE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS, PEOPLE



And then it breaks off into a whole Lord of the Flies mashup when the Dothraki kill piggers and go boar hunting...

My thought was "And then what? Ned has no role in the rest of the series. You don't kill him off and he-what?-spends the rest of the series in the dungeon?"

My thoughts exactly, I think they have done a great job adapting the books so far

I heard that too...

Unless the book was crap to begin with, when making a film or video adaptation, it is philosophically, ethically, artistically, and aesthetically impossible to take too much from the book.

Dinosaurs = Dragons
Spaceships = the Comet
WE'RE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS, PEOPLE "
Hehehehe, ^5

Besides Sean Bean can't live until the end of any show/film.

Gotta say I laughed out loud on that one! 8)






Seriously, sit down with one of the books, and attempt to make a storyboard of the entire book in twelve episodes. Which scenes do you choose to show? Which not? What details have to go where, who has to say what lines, etc? It's a much bigger job than it looks like when you're sitting in front of a TV with a copy of the book in your hand. Try that with Dune, for instance.



I've read all five books, and am just putting number six out of my mind until it's a reality.

"All hail, Piggers!"

girglesnort!

So you're saying you think the books lack detail or emotional depth? How is that the case? They are packed to the brim with details, most of which the show combs through in order to keep it short enough. And I never felt the writing lacked emotional depth. Sure, you don't have actors to convey the motivation and personal qualities, but its all there!
Cersei is a terrible, narcissistic woman, Jaime is an arrogant but somewhat redeemable man, Tyrion is a sympathetic but cunning joker, Ned is a grizzled hero, Robert's a drunk, and so on... And the brutality of the world they live in, the unfairness, the hope, the attempts at redemption, it all comes through in spades. What's missing?

^^^^^^^^THIS. I couldn't have said it all better myself ;)

You didn't understand at all what I'm trying to say.
Oh well!


Brilliant!
I would be disappointed if the TV incorporated less from the books - so far they've only made changes where they would actually work better.
I'm curious about whether they're going to try and cram all of book three into this series though, or split it across 2. I also wonder if they're going to stay true to the books for season 4, given that (view spoiler)

Best post ever!!!

Funny you mention the walking dead. I started reading it first, then watching, found the show was literally word-for-word exactly like the books, and gave up on it.
I haven't seen GoT but have read it. Thinking of checking out the show soon.

I like that it stays really close to the source material. On the other end of the spectrum, I don't like when the film adaptation is too different from the books.

Emilie, I'm sure you won't be disappointed , both the books and the series are awesome!

No, I didn't agree, that's not the same thing as not understanding. You said you wished the books had more detail and that they didn't capture the inner turmoil of the characters. If anyone is missing something, I'd say its you because I can't imagine how anyone would think the shows, which are truncated compared to the book, did a better job of capturing any of this.


I said the books captures the inner turoil and feeling of characters better then the TV show, quite obviously. Somehow you twisted it around.
all discussions on this book
|
post a new topic