Warner Bros.
How often does a film adaptation of a novel you love meet your expectations? Circle one: A) Always B) Often C) Rarely D) Never.
Iâm guessing most people choose C, with a few falling solidly in the perennially disappointed D camp. There are, of course, those very few films that rise so far above their source material that we neednât speak of the novel at all. I can think of one off the top of my head, involving a certain well-dressed mobster family.
Then there are adaptations of books that depart so far from the source that any comparison seems like a wasted exercise. Spike Jonzeâs Adaptation is, of course, one example of such a film, one that gleefully revels in its meta-poetic license-taking.
Perhaps no single author save Shakespeare or Stephen King has had as many of his works adapted to the screen as sci-fi visionary Philip K. Dick. The results vary, but the force of Dickâs imagination seems to make every cinema version of his novels worth watching, I’d argue.
But all this talk of adaptation brings us to the question that the internet must ask of every subject under the sun: what are nth best films made from novelsâlist them, damn you! Okay, well, you wonât get just my humble opinion, but the collective votes of hundreds of Guardian readers, circa 2006, when writers Peter Bradshaw and Xan Brooks took a poll, then posted the results as âThe Big 50.â
The list includes those dapper mafiosi, but, as I said, Iâm not much inclinedânor was Francis Ford Coppolaâto Mario Puzoâs novel. But there are several films on the list made from books I do like quite a bit. In the 15Â picks below, I like the movies almost or just as much. These are films from The Guardianâs big 50 that I feel do their source novels justice. Go ahead and quibble, rage, or even agree in the comments belowâor, by all means, make your own suggestions of cases where film and book meet equally high standards, whether those examples appear on âThe Big 50â or not.
1. A Clockwork Orange (1971)
Stanley Kubrickâs take on Anthony Burgessâ 1962 dystopian fable replicates the highly disorienting experience of traversing a fictional world through the eyes of a Beethoven-loving, Nadsat-speaking, sociopath. Malcolm McDowell gives the performance of his career (see above). So distinctive is the set design, it inspired a chain of Korova Milk Bars. Burgess himself had a complicated relationship with the film and its director. Praising the adaptation as brilliant, he also found its bleak, sardonic ending, and omission of the novelâs redemptive final chapterâalso missing from U.S. editions of the book prior to 1986âtroubling. The filmâs relentless ultraviolence, so disturbing to many a viewer, and many a religious organization, also disturbed the author who imagined it.
2. One Flew Over the Cuckooâs Nest (1975)
A film adaptation with an even more bravado ensemble cast (Danny DeVito, Brad Dourif, Louise Fletcher, Christopher Lloyd) and incredibly charismaticâand dangerousâlead, Jack Nicholson, Milos Formanâs Cuckooâs Nest stands perfectly well on its own. But lovers of Ken Keseyâs madcap novel have many reasons for favorable comparison. One vast difference between the two, however, lies in the narrative point-of-view. The book is narrated by willfully silent Chief Bromdenâthe film mostly takes McMurphyâs point-of-view. Without a voice-over, it would have been near-impossible to stay true to the source, but the result leaves the novelâs narrator mostly on the sidelinesâalong with many of his thematic concerns. Nonetheless, actor Will Sampson imbues the towering Bromden with deep pathos, empathy, and comic stoicism. When he finally speaks, itâs almost like weâve been hearing his voice all along (see above).
3. To Kill a Mockingbird (1962)
âMiss Jean Louise, stand up! Your fatherâs passing.â If this scene (above), doesnât choke you up just a little, well⦠I don’t really know what to say…. The sentimental adaptation of the reclusive Harper Leeâs only novel is flawed, righteous, and loveable. Gregory Peck is Atticus Finch (and as far as adaptations goâdespite the brave attempts of many a fine actorâis Ahab as well). And the young Mary Badham is Scout. Robert Duvall makes his screen debut as kindly recluse Boo Radley, audiences learn how to pronounce âchiffarobeââ¦. It’s as classic a piece of work as the novelâseems almost impossible to separate the two.
4. Apocalypse Now (1979)
Francis Ford Coppola and screenwriter John Miliusâthe Hollywood character so well caricatured by John Goodman in The Big Lebowskiâtransform Joseph Conradâs lean 1899 colonialist novella Heart of Darkness into a grandiose, barely coherent, psychedelic tour-de-force set in the steaming jungles of Vietnam. Brando glowers in shadow, Robert Duvall strikes hilariously macho poses, Martin Sheen genuinely loses his mind, and a manic Dennis Hopper shows up, quotes T.S. Eliot, and nearly upstages everyone (above). Roger Ebert loved the even longer, crazier Redux, released in 2001, saying it âshames modern Hollywoodâs timidity.â Novelist Jessica Hagedorn fictionalized the movieâs legendary making in the Philippines. How much is left of Conrad? I would say, surprisingly, quite a bit of the spirit of Heart of Darkness survivesâmaybe even more than in Nicolas Roegâs straightforward 1994 adaptation with John Malkovich as Kurtz and Tim Roth as Marlow.
5. Trainspotting (1996)
Danny Boyleâs adaptation of Irvine Welshâs addiction-themed first novel—or rather collection of interlinked stories—about a scrappy bunch of Scottish lowlifes may be very much a product of its moment, but its hard to imagine a more perfect screen realization of Welshâs punk prose. Character-driven in the best sense of the phrase, Boyleâs comic Trainspotting manages the estimable feat of telling a story about drug addicts and criminal types that doesnât feature any golden-hearted hookers, self-righteous, didactic pop sociology, or other Hollywood drug-movie staples. A sequelâbased on Welshâs follow-up novel Pornoâmay be forthcoming.
And below are 10 more selections from The Guardian‘s top 50 in which—I’d say—film and book are both, if not equally, great:
6. Blade Runner (1982)
7. Dr. Zhivago (1965)
8. Empire of the Sun (1987)
9. Catch-22 (1970)
10. Lolita (1962)
11. Tess (1979)
12. The Hound of the Baskervilles (1939)
13. The Day of the Triffids (1962)
14. Alice (1988)
15. Lord of the Flies (1963)
So, there you have itâmy top 15 from The Guardianâs list of 50 best adaptations. What are your favorites? Look over their other 35âWhat glaring omissions deserve mention (The Shining? Naked Lunch? Dr. Strangelove? Lawrence of Arabia? The Color Purple?), which inclusions should be stricken, forgotten, burned? (Why, oh, why was the Tim Burton Charlie and the Chocolate Factory remake picked over the original?) All of the films mentioned are in English—what essential adaptations in other languages should we attend to? And finally, what alternate versions do you prefer to some of the most-seen adaptations of novels or stories?
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Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness
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15 Great Films Adapted From Equally Great Novels
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