
This week's
Booking Through Thursday topic is about movies made from books:
Even though it’s usually a mistake (grin) … do movies made out of books make you want to read the original?To start with, I should say that, ideally, I prefer to read the book first, and
then see the film. But since conditions are very rarely ideal, I do usually end up seeing the film adaptations before I read the book (or, even more frequently,
instead of reading the book).
Sometimes seeing the movie first will do just the opposite – convince me that the book really isn't something I want to spend any time on. I suppose that's unfair – most film adaptations leave much or most of the original book far behind. But the movies do sometimes have that effect.
This is an interesting question for me because I've been thinking a lot about books-into-movies this week, since seeing the DVD of Roman Polanski's latest film,
The Ghost Writer. It's really a great work that didn't get enough attention because of the unfortunate personal drama that was swirling around Polanski at the time he was making it. It's an adaptation of Robert Harris' political thriller,
The Ghost, and Polanski worked closely with Harris on the screenplay. And after seeing the film and a short documentary about the making of the film, now I really want to read the novel. (Polanski's film
The Ninth Gate, an adaptation of Arturo
Pérez-
Reverte's novel
The Club Dumas had that same effect – for which I'll be forever grateful.)
So I guess my answer to the question would be:
sometimes but not always. Which seems to be my answer to most of these
BTT questions. Well, decisiveness is so over-rated, don't you think?
And what about you? Do movies ever influence your reading? (Please feel free to leave me a link to your BTT post in a comment here.)