The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
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How is the book different from the film
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Jason
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Sep 08, 2011 07:21AM

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That was my experience as well. I think the think is that the book and the film are very different, so if you're expecting the film to be like the book then you will be disappointed. But if you go back, knowing that the two are very different things, then the film does turn out to be a lot of fun on its own terms.


That's a great way to look at it.

I didn't even make it all the way through. That bad.



I agree! They couldn't possibly put all of the stuff from the book into the movie. The books are better, but I did like the movie. A lot of things that were in the movie might make better sense when you read the books(s).


The books though are the ultimate.

Like Andrew, I grew up with the radio series and the books, which were the brightest and freshest pieces of comedy writing of their time.


Yes. just about all of it.

Having said that, I love the book so much more. Adams had a flare for description that just doesn't come through when taken off the printed page. You have to read his words to truly see the picture he's painting and get the scope of his humor.

The way one of my friends put it... all the various ways this has been told (comic, book, movie, TV, and radio) are quite different from each other and all of them are good for their own reasons.

For the most part, I thought the movie stayed pretty close to the book. I absolutely loved that some of the text of the Guide was quoted directly in the movie (especially the part about the whale.) Yes, there are significant difference. Some material is added and some is pulled from the second book. (The Hitchhiker's Guide is short enough that the first book probably wasn't long enough to make a full a movie, so such additions were necessary.)
Overall, despite the differences (particularly the ending) I felt that the movie stayed true to the spirit and humor of the book. It helped to know that Adams was involved with the movie before his death, which indicates to me that he probably approved of the changes. I dislike it when Hollywood changes things on their own, but I don't mind so much when the author is involved in the process. The story is ultimately the work of the author, therefore it is his story to adapt.

L.S, my boyfriend read the books, and he couldn't stand Marvin! (He enjoyed the stories very much, but he made it clear that Marvin was his least favorite character.)


L.S, my boyfriend read the books, and he couldn't stand Marvin! (He enjoyed the stories very much, but he made it cle..."
Karla. I think I'm coming at it from the opposite end. Marvin was always my favorite, and I didn't really like the sorta iMarvin from the movie, even with Alan Rickman's voice. He was just nowhere near how I'd pictured him. But maybe I'm just being picky.

And yeah, the BBC series is quite good.
But speaking of movies, apparently shortly before Douglas Adams' death, they* were planning a screenplay starring Hugh Laurie as Arthur Dent, which would have been amazing. But alas, tragedy struck.
*I think I read this on Stephen Fry's IMDb. Not entirely sure, though...

A message from Douglas Adams:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kROHbQ...

A message from Douglas Adams:
http://www.youtube.com/..."
This pleases me greatly.
And I see a nod there to Monty Python.

I know! It's so wonderful!


The movie added at least one extra character not in the book, Humma Kavula. He's the crazy cult guy. In the book Zaphod doesn't lose one of his heads, nor does Trillian shoot him with the "point of view" gun. In fact, no one undergoes any serious character development. The characters also don't even stand in a Vogon queue, although that part of the movie was pretty funny. The characters also enter the interior of Magrathea through the hole that the whale made when it hit the ground rather than a portal.(I can understand why they didn't want to put that in the movie, however). Perhaps the worst cut, however, is the scene where the space cop tell Arthur and gang that, "I'm not the kind of guy that shoots people and then goes to bars and brags about it. I'm the kind of guy that shoots people and then agonizes over it for hours with my girlfriend."
There are alot of little differences. Most of the things that were changed or left out were the things that made me love the book. Although the movie does have both Alan Rickman and Zooey, so I can't complain too much.

Each version is deliberately different and all are fantastic though I've always thought the radio versions were the best. In my opinion the real gem is the second radio series which was never made into a book and seems to take place in a parallel universe at the same time as the third book. It's really funny and often seems to be forgotten.


L.S, my boyfriend read the books, and he couldn't stand Marvin! (He enjoyed the stories very much, but ..."
Oh, no, the visual of Marvin in the movie was terrible, I agree!

It's merely an improbability.

I watched the book for forty-two minutes, and it didn't do a single thing to make me laugh. So I picked it up and read it, instead.

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