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message 51:
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Arthur
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Jan 29, 2020 08:27AM

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Agreed. The stories are very different, but I really enjoy both.



I'm not totally sure if I'm right with this one because I read and saw both of them when I was a kid. Also I read the books in Dutch and saw the television series in English and somehow everything in English sounds scarier to me.
But reading the 'Kippenvel' series didn't do as much as for as what watching the Goosebumps series did. I think Kid-Me preferred the books though because they were less scary...
Maybe someone else do know how much these two differ?

I'm sorry.
I didn't know that there were films, but I agree that the book covers of Goosebumps seem to be the scariest part of them. They're pretty tame according to my sons.

I actually have a similar issue with reading vs watching. I find things that I can read easily much more scary when watched. For example, The Exorcist. The movie STILL freaks me out to this day (despite the fact that I've seen it dozens of times), but the book, which was excellent, hardly affected my Scare Nerves at all.
I think it's the visual aspect - I just respond differently to it. Maybe it's similar for you with the Goosebumps series? :)

Ha! That's really annoying. Hadn't heard that before, though.
I'd like to say Nourse stole the titel from PKD but of course PKD's book was not titled "Blade Runner" and both of the books were published before the movie.

Fancher [one of the movie's screenplay writers] found a cinema treatment by William S. Burroughs for Alan E. Nourse's novel The Bladerunner (1974), titled Blade Runner (a movie). Scott liked the name, so Deeley obtained the rights to the titles.

I'm sorry. "
Hahaha I can't stop laughing. Perfect delivery!

I'm not tota..."
The Iron Man by Ted Hughes - filmed as The Iron Giant, very different in both cases but both great - would like to have seen the dragon in the film though

I think it's the visual aspect - I just respond differently to it."
This is just how our bodies and brains work. We basically have three layers of cognition which go in this order: sound -> sight -> reading. The theory is that this is the case because of how our brains developed.
Visual stimuli bypasses our mental filters entirely, therefore affecting us more deeply because we aren’t processing it critically. Language is a latecomer to our abilities, evolutionarily speaking, so it requires more mental work, and therefore has to get through more filters.
Sound is the most primal of all, bypassing our brain entirely. It’s effectively hardwired directly to our nervous system. That’s why a loud noise will cause us to jump before we even register the sound: it’s an ancient survival mechanism. You see this in animals readily, especially cats. A loud noise will send them into full avoidance mode instantaneously. Humans have it, too, but we tend to condition ourselves out of the most extreme reactions.
So a scary movie that effectively utilizes a sight and sound combination will terrify us more immediately *and* more intimately precisely because it’s doing an end-run around our defenses. That’s why jump scares in horror flicks always combine an object and a sharp, loud noise. That combo turns our autonomic nervous system against us.
If you want to diminish the effect, simply watch a scary movie with sound turned off. The impact is dramatically decreased. Compare that to a scary radioplay, which will be massively terrifying because the sound effects and music cues will practically cause your body to react beyond your control.



1974 for Blade Runner by Alan Nourse
1979 for William Burrough's adaptation of Nourse's book
1982 for Blade Runner movie
I don't remember the Phillip K. Dick book even using the term Blade Runner, so Nourse didn't steal it from him. the original Blade Runner is a fairly good book.
The book doesn't use the term Blade Runner. It was taken from an adapted screenplay of Nourse's novel because it sounded cooler than Do Androids Dream. Weird and unnecessary if you ask me.

Excellent example, seconded.

And yet the film version of Slaughterhouse-Five (1972, directed by George Roy Hill) is one of the most accurate book-to-film adaptations of all.

Yep. Reference my message above (message 62).

It's good and daring that Scorcese stepped out of his usual, but he's better with gangsters.

They also did that with Dan Brown's 'Inferno'. The film ending is basically the opposite of the book.

And yet the film version of Slaughterhouse-Five (1972, directed by George Roy ..."
The film of Vonnegut's Mother Night is close to source too though not sf - can't see how they could film Slapstick, or Lonesome No More! though


Full Metal Jacket is based on the 3-story collection The Short-Timers. The movie is better, but some parts of the stories are so vivid you almost feel like you’re there. The third story kind of goes off the rails, like the author did a LOT of drugs when he returned from Nam and decided to write while stoned. So the movie really only uses the first two, which was a good choice. However, that part at the end of the film where the marines are walking through the devastated city while singing the Mickey Mouse Club theme song is a decent taste of the surrealism in the last story. https://youtu.be/PmILOL55xP0


And that don't suk.

And then there is the Sci-Fi Channel adaptation of the same series, which Le Guin was famously unhappy about.

Peter Pan This is the book that taught me not trust Disney when I was a kid.
The Princess Bride A rare case where I like the movie better.
A Stir of Echoes Another movie I liked better than the book. Similar but a few important differences.
All of the Jason Bourne movies. They start out similar and then could not be more different. Which is probably a good thing because I hated all the books except for the first one.
Dolores Claiborne The movie skipped almost all of the horror elements.
Books mentioned in this topic
A Sound of Thunder (other topics)A Stir of Echoes (other topics)
Peter Pan (other topics)
Dolores Claiborne (other topics)
The Princess Bride (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Alan E. Nourse (other topics)Alan E. Nourse (other topics)
William S. Burroughs (other topics)