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In article , MC
wrote: The imagination is in your mind, but not necesarily in that of the author. So? Are you saying that you've never seen a film that is a greater work of art than the book it was based on? Yes. I read over 100 books a year, some years over 200, mix of fiction, non-fiction and tech stuff. If we're restricting this to fiction, I can safely say that I've never seen a movie that was better than the book. If you feel differently, this may well reflect differences in what you & I read. There's no movie I've ever seen that hasn't butchered the book's plot and character development in an attempt to get it small enough/simple enough for a film. Maybe if your reading taste runs to generic Westerns and the like, this isn't a problem. Not much plot to cut down. Have you seen Blade Runner? No. Nor have I bothered watching Terminator, Die Hard and other such ilk. Life's too short to waste it on such crap. PDW Cheers Peter Wiley wrote: In article , MC wrote: Donal wrote: Films rarely manage to capture more than a tiny percentage of the brilliance of a good book. Sometimes they can be much more. Perhaps you should look beyond the 'plot' and consider the cinematography... At a physical data content level a film generally contians far more data than a book. For those with little/no imagination...... PDW |
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