Friday, February 19, 2016

Source VS Adaptation, aka, "Is the Book Always Better?"

Is the book always better? This is a debate that’s been going on for a long time. So long, in fact, that you probably don’t remember its origins…assuming it has one, that is. Anyway, the argument of “adaptation VS source” is a tricky one, no matter how much you try to distill it to a basic side. Why? Simple:

Because it’s incredibly subjective.

Art, for good or bad, is in the eye of the beholder. A book might be cherished by some for X reason, while others might hate it for Y reason. Conversely, the adaptation might be loved by some for X reason and hated by others for Y reason. But, above all, there’s usually a personal reason for the preference.


Allow me to give some context for this piece: a few weeks ago, my family had a big dinner at my house in honour of my grandparents being in from Florida for a few days. It wasn’t long before the dinner conversation turned to the Oscar nominees for Best Picture. As one of my cousins read them aloud, she eventually got to The Martian and shared a brief look of disgust before muttering “the book was so much better” under her breath. As someone who loved that movie, I was dumbfounded. Given how much she’d been looking forward to seeing the film, it didn’t help either.

My cousin couldn’t articulate why she didn’t like the film as much as the book when someone challenged her. I don’t blame her, as it’s not something most people stop and think about. But it offended me that she couldn’t do it, as this wasn’t the first time I’ve heard such a statement. I’ve heard it several dozen times over the years, and it’s always bothered me. So I decided to write about it on my blog.

Anyway, since this is a tricky topic, as there are so many failed and successful adaptations out there, let’s look at a few reasons for why a book might be considered “better” than its adaptation:

First, context. When writing a book, it’s important to remember that the author, assuming they’re intelligent, probably has a reason for why the story’s being written. For some, it might be political, as with George Orwell’s 1984 or Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. Others might be writing to express themselves in a way that can’t be contained in their minds, like with JK Rowling’s Harry Potter series. But above all else, context dictates material, and that might not translate as well to adaptation.

Second, lack of limitations. Books are one of the few mediums in which restrictions are almost non-existent. Movies, TV shows, films, they all have to factor in practical and time restraints, not to mention financial limitations. With all of these mediums, you can only do so much realistically. With a book, however, all you really need is an imagination, some paper and some relatively cheap accessories that aren’t hard to find. Because of this, a book can go on for however long the author wants.

Third, format. I’m not opposed to adaptations when done right, but some books don’t translate well to other mediums. Usually this involves books that are either incredibly dense, or are so elaborate that no other medium can truly replicate it. Because of this, the end result might not work because it’s not feasible. The best example I can think of is Cloud Atlas, which is so dense and intricate that successfully translating it to film was nigh-impossible no matter how hard The Wachowskis tried.


Fourth, vision. This one’s trickier because it’s the most subjective, but the vision of the author and the vision of the adapter aren’t always in-sync. This isn't always the case, especially when the original author is a consultant (see, again, the Harry Potter series,) but oftentimes there’s a disconnect between source and end-result. It can work in the adaptation’s favour, I much prefer the Lord of the Rings movies to their book counterparts, but often it’s a recipe for disappointment. Especially when the adaptation lacks passion, but that’s another subject on its own.

And fifth, overhype. This one’s the most blunt and least fair, but it’s also probably the most-important: sometimes…an adaptation can’t meet expectations. You see this time and time again, even with good adaptations, and it’s especially difficult the longer a gap there is between book and adaptation. It doesn’t help that human nature complicates matters, as we often get excited over the stuff we love and set the bar unrealistically high. An nothing can reach unrealistic expectations, even when it’s good.

As you can see, there are many reasons for why an adaptation might not be considered as good as its source. I’m now going to tackle each point, deconstruct it and explain why it isn’t always fair.

Beginning with the first point, while it’s true that a good book has an underlying message behind it, not all books are. Sometimes, even when there’s a message to be had, it’s harmful and toxic. The Twilight books condone stalker romance, while the Fifty Shades books romanticize BDSM relationships. Even Atlas Shrugged, a highly-respected novel in the ultra-conservative world, preaches trampling of others in hopes of underpinning the current, distorted version of The American Dream. Books aren’t always perfect.

Additionally, sometimes the movie can improve on the message. The Lorax might speak volumes about the negative effects of business on the environment, but its 1972 short film adaptation also presented the other side with a simple claim that livelihoods matter too. It kept Dr. Seuss’s message intact, but it added weight to The Once-ler’s character. In the same breath, Les Misérables works better as a musical because it keeps the core themes of the book while trimming a lot of the fat.

The best example I can think of is Batman: Under the Red Hood. Based on two famous stories, that being Jason Todd’s death and his eventual resurrection, the movie’s considered superior because it’s more-focused than both comics. It also helps that Judd Winick, the original writer, was a consultant for the film, meaning that not only was his message about vigilantism and the fine-line between justice and extremism not lost, it was actually improved upon. In other words, sometimes the adaptation adds to the original vision.


Next, limitations. This is mostly true, since books are cheaper to produce, but not always. Ignoring the aforementioned example of Les Misérables, my favourite counter-argument is Peter Jackson’s take on the Lord of the Rings books. Sure, they’re flawed and different quite a bit in tone, but I prefer them for one reason: they use film as a medium to their advantage. As I've said on Infinite Rainy Day:
“JRR Tolkien loved to hear himself speak, enough so that his writing was cumbersome on more than one occasion. Frequently throughout, Tolkien would halt the narrative to either describe a backdrop, or insert a song that did the same…[t]his is where the movies were an improvement. For one, most of the songs were axed, allowing room to focus on the content and characters. Additionally, the descriptions that took pages to get through were summed up in a few seconds via camera shots. And they were equally effective at conveying scope. Jackson understood that film is a visual medium, and, hence, used that to his advantage.”
I still hold this to be true. I also stated that I preferred Fullmetal Alchemist as a show to its Manga counterpart because, if going by the “more faithful” adaptation, it improved on many areas of the comic that didn’t really work in my eyes.

Remember, books aren’t flawless. They, like any other art-form, are a product of the human element, an author, and suffer from the setbacks that come from it. Even the best-written books are riddled with problems if you look for them, all stories are. And sometimes the adaptation might improve on these setbacks in ways you never thought possible. It happens more often than you’d think.

Then there’s format. While some adaptations don’t work because the book was clearly the superior format, there are always exceptions. Les Misérables is a prime example. Like I said, the musical trimmed a lot of the excess fat. Victor Hugo came from a time-period where authors were paid by the word, and the book frequently goes on long, wordy tangents to meet paycheques. It made sense at the time, but in the 21st Century, where writing is more about efficiency, it doesn’t fly anymore. So cutting the extra details out makes sense.


Additionally, some format changes work for the best. Les Misérables worked because it trimmed the fat. The Lord of the Rings movies worked because they condensed long-winded prose into palatable sweeps of cinematography. And plenty of other examples of “improvement over source” exist, so much so that I can’t name them off the top of my head. All you have to do is look.

On the subject of vision, that’s not always bad. Like I said with Fullmetal Alchemist, I much prefer the anime because it knew what to change, add or remove for the sake of TV. I also prefer Coraline as a film because it made Coraline a more compelling character. These aren’t the only examples, they’re merely the ones I can name off the top of my head. Essentially, sometimes the adaptation does it better.

And if it doesn’t do it better, so what? Plenty of adaptations are inferior to their book counterparts…and they’re still good. Some are even, dare I say it, excellent. Writing them off because they don’t line up with the original vision is ridiculous, as a literal, 100% faithful adaptation would take too long. Not to mention, it’d be impossible if the adaptation were to be good.

Finally, there’s overhype. This isn’t a fault of the adaptation at all, but rather of the audience. When you overhype something, you’re setting the bar way too high. So when the end-result doesn’t meet that expectation, even if it’s good, then who’s really to blame? Is it the adaptation’s fault for not meeting your unrealistic expectations? Think about it.

I’m not suddenly calling adaptations “saintly”. They’re inherently flawed, as are books. But to write them off because “the book was better” is dishonesty. Because sometimes they are. And when they’re not? Well, they might still be worth checking out. Also, I do think The Martian was a great adaptation, and I do think my cousin was being unfair. She can disagree all she wants, but it’s worth thinking about.

10 comments:

  1. You already know that I cannot in good conscience consider your take on the Lord of the Rings movies to be sufficient justification for every single change they made to the source material, so I won't reiterate my earlier counterpoints here. With that said- I think what you're touching on here in this editorial ties in with my belief that adaptations need not be evaluated *solely* as adaptations. Something can be a poor adaptation, and yet be a perfectly decent stand-alone. And *yes* to an adaptation's inferiority to the source material not automatically precluding it from being any good at all.

    And as a side-note, I recently re-read The Lord of the Rings. Frankly, Tolkien's long-windedness is, as regards this particular book at least, noticeably overstated in most instances; its actually pretty rare for Tolkien to go on about the scenery without any bits of characterization and dialogue for more than a paragraph or two, especially after the midway point of The Fellowship of the Ring. Have you ever had the misfortune to read a James Fenimore Cooper novel? Because I have, and he's enough (or ought to be)for doubters of Tolkien's prose in LOTR to not realize how good they really had it. I honestly think its the pacing more so than the prose per se that throws people off the most. That stretch of the story between Frodo's departure from Bag End and his arrival at Bree goes on for too long with minimal plot development.


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  2. I suppose this is a good place to mention that I finally saw FMA: Brotherhood. Its a good show -in some cases, very good- although its not until the end of the tenth episode or so that it begins to step out of its predecessor's shadow and fully become its own thing. From that point on, it a generally effective action/suspense thriller for most of the rest of its runtime. Its an altogether more conventional show than the 03 version, but I don't think that's necessarily a crime, even if I personally prefer what it offers in terms of story and character a bit less than what the older series brought to the table.

    With that being said, I do have some notable problems with Brotherhood. Its first ten episodes are noticeably rushed -sometimes painfully so- while the final battle *really* drags. In these portions, the dialogue is also decidedly unsubtle, and not in a good way; moments of good-to-great characterization get brought down several pegs from where they could have been because they wind up being overly expository [see Envy's death for a good example of this]. Granted, the dialogue isn't exactly subtle throughout, it just hinders the show the most in these two portions, spelling out for us what we're supposed to take away from a scene to the point where it hinders our emotional investment. I suppose its to Brotherhood's credit that from episodes 10-49, it remains so compulsively watchable as to allow one to overlook [if not necessarily ignore the existence of] this flaw. Its just a pity they couldn't manage that for the entirety of the show- or better yet, not have it be an issue at all.

    Also -and this absolutely must be said- Father is, in execution, an inferior villain to Dante. It didn't have to be this way; on paper, they both strike me as compelling villains [even if I lean towards Dante as a matter of personal preference]. In execution, Father works fairly well...until the finale. Methinks Arakawa grossly miscalculated with Father's "skinless" form because I couldn't take it seriously in the least. When he swallowed Hoenheim, he looked like nothing so much as a pregnant Slenderman in a cheesy Halloween costume. It got even worse when he activated the transmutation circle and swallowed "God". When you're villain commits mass murder, you don't want you're audience laughing their heads off. And yet, that is exactly how I wound up reacting. The subsequent battle was likewise fairly cheesy, for the most part. Thank God for the fact that the last couple of episodes ended the series decently, because that climax was pretty absurd in execution.



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  3. [Also, thank God for the likes of Wrath, Pride, Envy, and Kimblee for being fairly interesting as villains, enough to make up for my disappointment in Father.]

    Is Brotherhood better than the original series? As an adaptation, maybe- not having read the manga as yet, I'm not really in a position to have a proper opinion on that. As a stand-alone product, however- well, I quite enjoyed the majority of it, but because of the flaws I mentioned being a bit more egregious than the flaws of the original, I feel it must place it a couple of notches lower. I think it'd be very unfair to call it a worthless show. It might not leave the viewer with a tremendous amount to think about, but once its past the initial hurdle, it manages to be a very watchable action/suspense thriller despite its faults. Its characters are [for the most part], decent enough, even if some of them wind up being underutilized [looking at you, Lan Fan], or superfluous [Yoki and the repentant chimeras]. In a couple of instances, they manage to outshine their original counterparts; Brotherhood's Hoenheim and Kimblee are more compelling as characters than their 03 incarnations [though they admittedly weren't bad there].

    In general, though, while I enjoyed Brotherhood quite a bit, my heart lies more with the 2003 series. Its cast managed to avoid getting overstuffed, it was more subtly written, its main antagonist was better in execution, its main characters were more fully-fleshed out, and I just plain prefer its greater focus on drama, atmosphere, and characterization over action and suspense. Simply put, it appeals more to my storytelling sensibilities than does Brotherhood. I'm eclectic enough that I can enjoy Brotherhood as well, but I still have my preferences.

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    1. It's been a while since I read Tolkien's work, but I remember it being a 2.5 year experience that was quite cumbersome at times. And I'm a strong reader too. The movies aren't flawless, but I enjoy them much more because they streamlined a lot of the parts that bothered me (particularly a lot of the detours in the first book.)

      As for Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood, I'm pretty much in agreement with you. Although, I don't like the way it ended. It had three or four good places in its final episode where it could've stopped, but it didn't. Instead, it went for overly-sappy and ridiculous for its ending. That bothered me a lot...

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    2. I'm likewise a strong reader. I first read The Lord of the Rings at the age of ten, and I finished it within a week and a half. I've read it many times since then, never taking more than three or four weeks to get through it all. Yet it took me over a year to get through "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire" the one time I read it. I've seen that book described by some who've disliked Tolkien as a more engaging read, yet the majority of it bored me out of my skull.

      In other words: I don't think you're being a strong reader and still disliking Tolkien's writing style says as much about his writing's objective quality as you seem to be implying.

      At any rate, what I'm trying to get at with the Lord of the Rings is that people seem to latch onto the wrong things whenever they try to point out what its flaws are. The book's detractors go on so much about there being pages and pages of scenery description with nothing else happening, and yet ninety-nine percent of the time, Tolkien *does not do that* in LOTR. Barring portions of about three chapters, he's actually very, very good about *not* bogging down the narrative with descriptions of nature. Its just that, rather than simply say "they entered a forest", he'll spend five or six sentences describing what that forest looked like, before going immediately back to the characters. That's hardly unreasonable. It might not be cinematic- but it is unfair to expect it to be. Tolkien was not making a movie- he was writing a novel. The films' use of cinematography to take the place of Tolkien's descriptions of the landscape cannot reasonably construed as an "improvement" over the source material because they are merely the translation of exactly what Tolkien was doing using valid literary techniques into a vastly different "language"- in this case, the language of film. It would be more rational to instead praise Jackson's cinematography as a skillful adaptation of Tolkien's descriptive prose into a different medium.

      As for Tolkien's poems and songs- while I quite enjoy them, I do agree that there are too many of them, especially in "The Fellowship of the Ring".

      Honestly, while Tolkien very definitely did "love the sound of his own voice", I don't think he gets nearly enough credit for how well he was able to economize his actual diction and structure in The Lord of the Rings. Outside of the poems and songs, the narrative seldom grinds to halt in favor of minutiae. Its just that some of the events and characterization bits within that narrative could have been cut without hurting the overall plot and character arcs.

      Its not Tolkien's prose. Its his pace.

      Side note: if I sound frustrated here, please understand that its not you- its years of hearing the same old criticisms of Tolkien's prose style and not being able to see them as being anything but unfair exaggerations, no matter how hard I squint.

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    3. It's fine. It's all personal anyway. And if it helps, The Hobbit wasn't an issue for me at all, while the films were a chore to sit through...

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    4. Regarding Brotherhood: The end credits montage was arguably a bit too sappy, but for the most part, I didn't mind. Mostly, I was just relieved that they didn't rush the ending. If it didn't bother me overmuch, that could be because I was simply happy that I was able to take it more seriously than I could the final battle with Father.


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    5. The Hobbit is a much shorter work in terms of page count, with a much smaller scope and only one main protagonist. Also, its atmosphere is less like an epic and more like a fable. I could absolutely see how someone might enjoy it, and yet not enjoy The Lord of the Rings as much, as a matter of personal preference.

      Regarding the Hobbit film trilogy- oh boy, how do I keep this short? Because I could discuss this from any number of angles...I'll give you my nutshell opinions.

      First off, I was okay with the notion of making it into two movies; the book takes place in over a year's worth of time, and its actually kind of deceptively slight. You might be able to do it in a single three hour movie, but you'd wind up with a fair bit of compression. A air of two-two and a hald hour movies would have been fine. Making it into three movies was an insane proposition- especially since they'd already scripted it as two, and had shot most of it as two. Setting aside any debate about adaptational quality, I wouldn't be surprised to learn that a lot of the problems came from hasty re-writes. We know the studio refused to give Jackson more than a few months to get organized after Del Toro left the project [as opposed to the two and a half years he had to get ready to shoot LOTR] and this was *before* it was split into three movies. We also have it on record that as a consequence of this, Jackson's crew had to revise things constantly. The shoot honestly sounds like it was a mess.

      Taken as a whole, the trilogy fails to do justice either to Tolkien's beloved novel, or to his wider body of writing. That much is clear. There are several extended portions [mostly in the first installment] that manage to be decent representations of Middle Earth in general, if not necessarily of The Hobbit per se. Despite the plenitude of issues with his scripts, Jackson's eye for quality casting in these films remains mostly intact [there are some poorly cast roles, but they are the exception, not the rule]. And Howard Shore's music is a textbook case of overachievement. I've listened all three scores on album multiple times, and while they're maybe a hair or two below the soundtracks for The Lord of the Rings movies, they're still absolutely wonderful to listen to; free from the confines of being within the film, they actually manage to conjure up mental images of scenes from the novel.

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    6. As stand-alone movies independent of the source material:

      "An Unexpected Journey", for all its flaws, is honestly the best of the trilogy. Yes, its overlong by about thirty minutes, and Azog is an inspid villain. And yes, it suffers from Jackson's tendency to shoehorn in contrived conflict among the protagonists at the expense of some of what made Tolkien's characters so compelling in the first place, as well as from some of its ludicrous excesses. But for the patient viewer, I'd argue that its a passable popcorn affair for the most part, even if its not exactly a must see.

      "The Desolation of Smaug": I really don't get why critics thought this was the best of the three. Once you look beyond Benedict Cumberbatch's performance as Smaug, it reveals itself to be a structural mess that's overlong by at least an hour, with an over-reliance on ludicrous action setpieces, all but one of which have no textual basis whatsoever. [Say what you will about the fight scenes in films one and three, but the majority of them at least had *some* sort of textual basis, however loose.] Smaug aside, the CGI is actually *worse* than in "An Unexpected Journey", with much of the movie looking more like a videogame than an actual film. Legolas is basically a parody of his former self. And the pathetic excuse for a romantic subplot borders on "I don't like sand" territory. Despite a few small scenes here and there, some good performances, and a pretty score, its honestly a pretty bad movie.

      Have I mentioned how much I enjoy it, though? Yes, seriously. I thought it was hilarious for all the wrong reasons- a pretty good unintentional comedy. Also, its actually a pretty decent fantasy RPG. I mean, think about it. There's a quest narrative, various party members, an escape from prison, sidequests, attempts to loot houses, NPCs to interact with and get quests from, lore, cutscenes interspersed amongst the various levels, and a boss fight at the end. Somebody even takes an arrow to the knee for crying out loud! Really, if you consider it as a videogame instead of a movie, it comes across much better.

      "The Battle of the Five Armies"- outside of [most of] the final twenty minutes, as well as the score, some short snippits, and most of the performances, this is a pretty bad movie, albeit one with a noticeably better grasp of story structure than "Desolation" [which is the main reason I rate it a bit higher]. But like "Desolation", it makes for wonderful unintentional comedy. After the second movie, I couldn't wait to see this one, because I was perversely curious to know how bad it was going to be. I wasn't disappointed; it was probably the funniest movie I saw in 2014 besides "The Lego Movie" [albeit it was funny for completely different reasons than the latter effort]. What was even funnier was that I and my friend had actually predicted a lot of what was going to happen with a startling degree of accuracy- and that includes Beorn being dropped from the back of an eagle like a paratrooper.

      So yes- the Hobbit Trilogy is largely a failure as an adaptation. And as a standalone work, it doesn't hold up much better, providing only a passable first installment and a pretty awful second and third installments. It makes for great unintentional comedy, however, for anyone who enjoys laughing at bad movies.

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    7. "they actually manage to conjure up mental images of scenes from the novel."

      Should have inserted after this:

      "But on the whole, they are a failure as adaptations."

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