jdavis said:Books are several hundred pages long, you just can't fit everything into a movie. Fellowship of the Rings is a good example. They literally cut out hundreds of pages of story, they changed the story up, they changed characters around and eliminated at least a dozen of characters, and that was just the first book. Yes the movie was wonderful, it was just brilliant but it wasn't a complete telling, it was a stylized version. They tried to stay as true to the book as possible but it isn't the 100% story it's a edited version. Another one? try Dune, the movie or the mini-series, neither were 100% on the money, matter of fact both drifted pretty far off the books path. Both were good for their own reasons but neither matched the book.
Books and movies are two different mediums, sometimes movies based on books are actually better than the book was, but there will always be differences.
Wow, this looks like the GRE Analytic Writing Section. Whether or not any movie made from a book has actually been as good as, or better than, the book from which it was made is irrelevant to your feeling that movies don't do books justice. Fact is, if a director wanted to, they could make a 6 hour movie version of Fellowship and recreate everything exactly as it was in the book. If the director wanted to he could even have a narrator read aloud everything that wasn't dialogue so the entire text of the book was recreated in the movie, which would then be about the equivalent of Gustav Dore's Illustrations for Dante, only animated. In other words there is nothing inherent in the medium of film that makes it inferior to the medium of text. For the record, though, that is one movie I would not bother seeing.
That much sort of agrees with your last bit, but the large part before that doesn't tie in, which is what I'm nitpicking. Actually, let's just skip all that and move on to "sometimes movies based on books are actually better." I have to go with most here, since most books made into movies are fairly new, and most of them are written by bad writers (generally predicative of bad thinkers). The days of Flaubert and Rilke are gone I guess. Can a movie do Finnegan's Wake? The answer is a freakish NO. Not at all.
Can a movie do LotR better than Tolkien did it? Yup.. especially if it cuts out the clunky prose and streamlines the spastic plot. I have no problem with writers that throw the unities to the wind and Aristotle be damned.. but Tolkien, while I liked LotR enough to read each book in a day or two when I was 9, I cannot stand anymore. The movies are the only way I will have any further contact with *that* story.