fbpx
Wikipedia

Film adaptation

A film adaptation is the transfer of a work or story, in whole or in part, to a feature film. Although often considered a type of derivative work, film adaptation has been conceptualized recently by academic scholars such as Robert Stam as a dialogic process.

While the most common form of film adaptation is the use of a novel as the basis, other works adapted into films include non-fiction (including journalism), autobiographical works, comic books, scriptures, plays, historical sources and even other films. Adaptation from such diverse resources has been a ubiquitous practice of filmmaking since the earliest days of cinema in nineteenth-century Europe. In contrast to when making a remake, movie directors usually take more creative liberties when creating a film adaptation.[1]

Elision and interpolation

In 1924, Erich von Stroheim attempted a literal adaptation of Frank Norris's novel McTeague with his film Greed. The resulting film was 9½ hours long, and was cut to four hours at studio insistence. It was then cut again (without Stroheim's input) to around two hours. The result was a film that was largely incoherent. Since that time, few directors have attempted to put everything in a novel into a film. Therefore, elision is all but essential.

In some cases, film adaptations also interpolate scenes or invent characters. This is especially true when a novel is part of a literary saga. Incidents or quotations from later or earlier novels will be inserted into a single film. Additionally and far more controversially, filmmakers will invent new characters or create stories that were not present in the source material at all. Given the anticipated audience for a film, the screenwriter, director or movie studio may wish to increase character time or to invent new characters. For example, William J. Kennedy's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel Ironweed included a short appearance by a prostitute named Helen. Because the film studio anticipated a female audience for the film and had Meryl Streep for the role, Helen became a significant part of the film. However, characters are also sometimes invented to provide the narrative voice.

Interpretation as adaptation

There have been several notable cases of massive inventive adaptation, including the Roland Joffe adaptation of The Scarlet Letter with explicit sex between Hester Prynn and the minister and Native American obscene puns into a major character and the film's villain. The Charlie Kaufman and "Donald Kaufman" penned Adaptation, credited as an adaptation of the novel The Orchid Thief, was an intentional satire and commentary on the process of film adaptation itself. All of those are cases of Nathaniel Hawthorne's point. The creators of the Gulliver's Travels miniseries interpolated a sanity trial to reflect the ongoing scholarly debate over whether or not Gulliver himself is sane at the conclusion of Book IV. In those cases, adaptation is a form of criticism and recreation as well as translation.

Change is essential and practically unavoidable, mandated both by the constraints of time and medium, but how much is always a balance. Some film theorists have argued that a director should be entirely unconcerned with the source, as a novel is a novel and a film is a film, and the two works of art must be seen as separate entities. Since a transcription of a novel into film is impossible, even holding up a goal of "accuracy" is absurd. Others argue that what a film adaptation does is change to fit (literally, adapt), and the film must be accurate to the effect (aesthetics), the theme, or the message of a novel and that the filmmaker must introduce changes, if necessary, to fit the demands of time and to maximize faithfulness along one of those axes.

In most cases adaptation, the films are required to create identities (for example, a characters' costume or set decor) since they are not specified in the original material. Then, the influence of film-makers may go unrecognized because there is no comparison in the original material even though the new visual identities will affect narrative interpretation. Peter Jackson's adaptations of The Lord of the Rings trilogy and The Hobbit by author JRR Tolkien represent an unusual case since many visual and stylistic details were specified by Tolkien. For the Harry Potter film series, author JK Rowling was closely consulted by the filmmakers, and she provided production designer Stuart Craig with a map of Hogwarts' grounds and also prevented director Alfonso Cuarón from adding a graveyard scene because the graveyard would appear elsewhere in a later novel.

An often overlooked aspect of film adaptation is the inclusion of sound and music. In a literary text, a specific sound effect can often be implied or specified by an event, but in the process of adaptation, filmmakers must determine specific the sound characteristics that subliminally affects narrative interpretation. In some cases of adaptation, music may have been specified in the original material (usually diegetic music). In Stephenie Meyer's 2005 Twilight novel, the characters Edward Cullen and Bella Swan both listen to Debussy's Clair de lune and Edward composes the piece Bella's Lullaby for Bella. While Clair de lune was a pre-existing piece of music, Bella's Lullaby was not and required original music to be composed for the 2008 movie adaptation.

In the 2016 sci-fi film 2BR02B: To Be or Naught to Be adapted from the story by Kurt Vonnegut, the film-makers decided to abandon Vonnegut's choice of music. They stated that they felt that it worked in his prose only because it was not actually heard. Filmmakers' test screenings found that Vonnegut's style of music confused audiences and detracted from narrative comprehension. The film's composer, Leon Coward, stated, "You can try to be as true to Vonnegut's material as possible, but at the end of the day also you’re working with the material that you as a team have generated, not just Vonnegut's, and that’s what you've got to make work."[2][3]

Theatrical adaptation

Stage plays are frequent sources for film adaptations.

Many of William Shakespeare's plays, including Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet, and Othello, have been adapted into films. The first sound adaptation of any Shakespeare play was the 1929 production of The Taming of the Shrew, starring Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks.[4] It was later adapted as both a musical play called Kiss Me, Kate, which opened on Broadway in 1948, and as the 1953 Hollywood musical of the same name. The Taming of the Shrew was again retold in 1999 as a teen comedy set in a high school in 10 Things I Hate about You, and also in 2003 as an urban romantic comedy, Deliver Us from Eva. The 1961 musical film West Side Story was adapted from Romeo and Juliet, with its first incarnation as a Broadway musical play that opened in 1957. The animated film The Lion King (1994) was inspired by Hamlet as well as various traditional African myths, and 2001's O was based on Othello.

Film adaptations of Shakespeare's works in languages other than English are numerous, including Akira Kurosawa's films Throne of Blood (1957, an epic film version of Macbeth), The Bad Sleep Well (1960, inspired by Hamlet) and Ran (1985, based on King Lear); and Vishal Bhardwaj's "Shakespearean trilogy" consisting of Haider (2014, a retelling of Hamlet), Omkara (2006, based on Othello) and Maqbool (2003, based on Macbeth).

Another way in which Shakespearean texts have been incorporated in films is to feature characters who are either actors performing those texts or characters who are somehow influenced or effected by seeing one of Shakespeare's plays, within a larger non-Shakespearean story. Generally, Shakespeare's basic themes or certain elements of the plot will parallel the main plot of the film or become part of a character's development in some way. Hamlet and Romeo and Juliet are the two plays which have most often been used in this way.[5] Éric Rohmer's 1992 film Conte d'hiver (A Tale of Winter) is one example. Rohmer uses one scene from Shakepeare's A Winter's Tale as a major plot device within a story that is not based on the play at all.

In Britain, where stage plays tend to be more popular as a form of entertainment than currently in the United States, many films began as a stage productions. Some British films and British/American collaborations that were based on successful British plays include Gaslight (1940), Blithe Spirit (1945), Rope (1948), Look Back in Anger (1959), Oh! What a Lovely War (1969), Sleuth (1972), The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975), Shirley Valentine (1989), The Madness of King George (1994), The History Boys (2006), Quartet (2012), and The Lady in the Van (2015).

Similarly, hit Broadway plays are often adapted into films, whether from musicals or dramas. Some examples of American film adaptations based on successful Broadway plays are Arsenic and Old Lace (1944), Born Yesterday (1950), Harvey (1950), A Streetcar Named Desire (1951), The Odd Couple (1968), The Boys in the Band (1970), Agnes of God (1985), Children of a Lesser God (1986), Glengarry Glen Ross (1992), Real Women Have Curves (2002), Rabbit Hole (2010), and Fences (2016).

On one hand, theatrical adaptation does not involve as many interpolations or elisions as novel adaptation, but on the other, the demands of scenery and possibilities of motion frequently entail changes from one medium to the other. Film critics will often mention if an adapted play has a static camera or emulates a proscenium arch. Laurence Olivier consciously imitated the arch with his Henry V (1944), having the camera begin to move and to use color stock after the prologue, indicating the passage from physical to imaginative space. Sometimes, the adaptive process can continue after one translation. Mel Brooks' The Producers began as a film in 1967, was adapted into a Broadway musical in 2001, and then adapted again in 2005 as a musical film.

Television adaptation

Feature films are occasionally created from television series or television segments, or vice versa, a television series will derive from a film, such as in the case of Bates Motel and Chucky. In the former, the film will offer a longer storyline than the usual television program's format and/or expanded production values. During the 1970s, many UK television series were turned into films including Dad's Army, On the Buses, Steptoe and Son and Porridge. In 1979, The Muppet Movie was a big success. In the adaptation of The X-Files to film, greater effects and a longer plotline were involved. Additionally, adaptations of television shows will offer the viewer the opportunity to see the television show's characters without broadcast restrictions. These additions (nudity, profanity, explicit drug use, and explicit violence) are only rarely a featured adaptive addition (film versions of "procedurals" such as Miami Vice are most inclined to such additions as featured adaptations) – South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut is a notable example of a film being more explicit than its parent TV series.

At the same time, some theatrically released films are adaptations of television miniseries events. When national film boards and state-controlled television networks co-exist, filmmakers can sometimes create very long films for television that they may adapt solely for time for theatrical release. Both Ingmar Bergman (notably with Fanny and Alexander but with other films as well) and Lars von Trier have created long television films that they then recut for international distribution.

Even segments of television series have been adapted into feature films. The American television sketch comedy show Saturday Night Live has been the origin of a number of films, beginning with The Blues Brothers, which began as a one-off performance by Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi.

Radio adaptation

Radio narratives have also provided the basis of film adaptation. In the heyday of radio, radio segments were often translated to film, usually as shorts. Radio series turned into film series include Dr. Christian, Crime Doctor and The Whistler. Dialog-heavy stories and fantastic stories from radio were also adapted to film (e.g. Fibber McGee and Molly and The Life of Riley). The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy began as a radio series for the BBC and then became a novel that was adapted to film.

Comic book adaptation

American comic book characters, particularly superheroes, have long been adapted into film, beginning in the 1940s with Saturday movie serials aimed at children. Superman (1978) and Batman (1989) are two later successful movie adaptations of famous comic book characters. In the Philippines, superhero comics have been adapted numerous times into films such as Darna (1951), Captain Barbell (1964), and Lastik Man (1965). In addition, comics of various genres other than those involving superheroes such as romance,[6] fantasy[7] and drama[8] have widely been used as a source for film adaptations such as Roberta (1951), Dyesebel (1953), Ang Panday (1980), Bituing Walang Ningning (1985) and Mars Ravelo's Bondying: The Little Big Boy (1989). In the early 2000s, blockbusters such as X-Men (2000) and Spider-Man (2002) have led to dozens of superhero films. The success of these films has also led to other comic books not necessarily about superheroes being adapted for the big screen, such as Ghost World (2001), From Hell (2001), American Splendor (2003), Sin City (2005), 300 (2007), Wanted (2008), and Whiteout (2009).

The adaptation process for comics is different from that of novels. Many successful comic book series last for several decades and have featured several variations of the characters in that time. Films based on such series usually try to capture the back story and “spirit” of the character instead of adapting a particular storyline. Occasionally, aspects of the characters and their origins are simplified or modernized.

Self-contained graphic novels, and miniseries many of which do not feature superheroes, can be adapted more directly, such as in the case of Road to Perdition (2002) or V for Vendetta (2006). In particular, Robert Rodriguez did not use a screenplay for Sin City but utilized actual panels from writer/artist Frank Miller's series as storyboards to create what Rodriguez regards as a "translation" rather than an adaptation.

Furthermore, some films based on long-running franchises use particular story lines from the franchise as a basis for a plot. The second X-Men film was loosely based on the graphic novel X-Men: God Loves, Man Kills and the third film on the storyline "The Dark Phoenix Saga". Spider-Man 2 was based on the storyline "Spider-Man No More!" Likewise, Batman Begins owes many of its elements to Miller's Batman: Year One and the film's sequel, The Dark Knight, uses subplots from Batman: The Long Halloween.

The Marvel Cinematic Universe starting in 2008 is a shared universe with films combining characters from different works by Marvel Comics. The DC Extended Universe starting in 2013 uses the same model for DC Comics.

The highest-grossing and most profitable comic book adaptations are Avengers: Endgame (2019) and Joker (2019), respectively.[9]

Video game adaptation

Tie-in video games with films or other properties have existed since home consoles and arcade games of the early 1980s. Developers are usually limited by what they can do with the film property, and may be further limited in time as to produce the game in time for the release of the film or other work.[10][11]

Video games have also been adapted into films, beginning in the early 1980s. Films closely related to the computer and video game industries were also done in this time, such as Tron and Cloak & Dagger, but only after the release of several films based on well-known brands has this genre become recognized in its own right. Video game films can take several forms, such as live-action works like Super Mario Bros., traditionally animated such as films based on the Pokémon franchise, or computer-animated such as Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within. There also exist original video animations (OVAs) based on popular games, such as Street Fighter Alpha: The Animation.

Similar to comic book-based films in the past (especially from 1980s), films based on video games tend to carry a reputation of lackluster quality and receive negative reaction from both film critics and fans of the source material.[12] This is generally due to difficulties in adopting a story meant to be played interactively into a linear movie-going experience.[13] Some, such as Super Mario Bros., were particularly negatively received and are considered among the worst films ever made. Super Mario Bros. was criticized for being too dark, violent and unfaithful (in plot) to the popular video game series.[14]

Another likely reason for the failure of video game adaptations is that structural conversion from video game to film format can be challenging for filmmakers. Shigeru Miyamoto, creator of Nintendo franchises including Mario and Zelda, said in a 2007 interview:

I think that part of the problem with translating games to movies is that the structure of what makes a good game is very different from the structure of what makes a good movie. Movies are a much more passive medium, where the movie itself is telling a story and you, as the viewer, are relaxing and taking that in passively. Whereas video games are a much more active medium where you are playing along with the story. ... I think that video games, as a whole, have a very simple flow in terms of what’s going on in the game. We make that flow entertaining by implementing many different elements to the video game to keep the player entertained. Movies have much more complex stories, or flow, to them, but the elements that affect that flow are limited in number. So I think that because these surrounding elements in these two different mediums vary so greatly, when you fail to take that into account then you run into problems.[15]

In an interview with Fortune in August 2015, Miyamoto said, "Because games and movies seem like similar mediums, people’s natural expectation is we want to take our games and turn them into movies. … I’ve always felt video games, being an interactive medium, and movies, being a passive medium, mean the two are quite different."[16]

Until 2019, no video game film - live-action or animated - had received a Rotten Tomatoes "fresh" rating, with a score over 60%. Three films since, Detective Pikachu, The Angry Birds Movie 2, and Sonic the Hedgehog have been able to break into the "fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes.[17][12] Both Detective Pikachu and Sonic the Hedgehog have posted better-than-expected domestic takes,[12] with Sonic having the highest domestic opening through 2020.[18] Sonic's success led to its sequel Sonic the Hedgehog 2 releasing in April 2022 and beating the first film's domestic opening, and also receiving a slightly higher score on Rotten Tomatoes.[19]

Following these films, new adaptions of games into films and television series became successful and showed that adaptions that held to a game's story but did not try to maintain the video game aspects were more popular with audiences. Shows such as Arcane, Cyberpunk: Edgerunners, and The Last of Us were all critically-praised series based on video games from 2021 through 2023.[20][21][22]

Though video game films are critically panned, they tend to do well from the international take at box offices. Warcraft, based on the World of Warcraft game, holds the highest take of any video game adaptation with US$433.6 million, while the six Resident Evil films hold the highest take for a series of US$1.2 billion on an average production budget between US$30 to 50 million.[12] Other financially successful video game films include: Mortal Kombat, Lara Croft: Tomb Raider, Uncharted, Assassin's Creed, Silent Hill, and Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time.[12]

Among the most well-known video game filmmakers is Uwe Boll, a German writer, director, and producer whose works include House of the Dead, Alone in the Dark, BloodRayne, In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Tale, Postal, and Far Cry, all of which were almost universally panned by critics. In 2016, he retired from filmmaking, citing market failures and funding difficulties.[23] Similarly, Paul W. S. Anderson has gained a reputation for his panned video game adaptations, particularly the first Mortal Kombat (despite positive reviews), the Resident Evil series and most recently Monster Hunter.[24]

Adaptations from other sources

While documentary films have often been made from journalism and reportage, so too have some dramatic films, including: All the President's Men (1976, adapted from the 1974 book); Miracle, (2004, from an account published shortly after the 1980 "miracle on ice"); and Pushing Tin (1999, from a 1996 New York Times article by Darcy Frey). An Inconvenient Truth is Al Gore's film adaptation of his own Keynote multimedia presentation. The 2011 independent comedy film, Benjamin Sniddlegrass and the Cauldron of Penguins was based on Kermode and Mayo's Film Review of Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief.

Films adapted from songs include Coward of the County, Ode to Billy Joe, Convoy, and Pretty Baby (each from a song of the same name).

Films based on toys include the Transformers franchise and the G.I. Joe films; there is a longer history of animated television series being created simultaneous to toy lines as a marketing tool. Hasbro's plans to for films based on their board games began with 2012's Battleship. While amusement park rides have often been based on action movies, conversely the 1967 Pirates of the Caribbean ride at Disneyland was adapted into Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl in 2003.

Remakes and film sequels are technically adaptations of the original film. Less direct derivations include The Magnificent Seven from The Seven Samurai, Star Wars from The Hidden Fortress, and Twelve Monkeys from La Jetée.

Many films have been made from mythology and religious texts. Both Greek mythology and the Bible have been adapted frequently. Homer's works have been adapted multiple times in several nations. In these cases, the audience already knows the story well, and so the adaptation will de-emphasize elements of suspense and concentrate instead on detail and phrasing.[original research?]

Awards

Many major film award programs present an award for adapted screenplays, separate from the award for original screenplays.

In the case of a film which was adapted from an unpublished work, however, different awards have different rules around which category the screenplay qualifies for. In 1983, the Canadian Genie Awards rescinded the Best Adapted Screenplay award they had presented to the film Melanie when they learned that the original work had been unpublished;[25] and in 2017, the film Moonlight, which was adapted from an unpublished theatrical play, was classified and nominated as an adapted screenplay by some awards but as an original screenplay by others.[26]

Adaptation of films

When a film's screenplay is original, it can also be the source of derivative works such as novels and plays. For example, movie studios will commission novelizations of their popular titles or sell the rights to their titles to publishing houses. These novelized films will frequently be written on assignment and sometimes written by authors who have only an early script as their source. Consequently, novelizations are quite often changed from the films as they appear in theatres.

Novelization can build up characters and incidents for commercial reasons (e.g. to market a card or computer game, to promote the publisher's "saga" of novels, or to create continuity between films in a series)

There have been instances of novelists who have worked from their own screenplays to create novels at nearly the same time as a film. Both Arthur C. Clarke, with 2001: A Space Odyssey, and Graham Greene, with The Third Man, have worked from their own film ideas to a novel form (although the novel version of The Third Man was written more to aid in the development of the screenplay than for the purposes of being released as a novel). Both John Sayles and Ingmar Bergman write their film ideas as novels before they begin producing them as films, although neither director has allowed these prose treatments to be published.

Finally, films have inspired and been adapted into plays. John Waters's films have been successfully mounted as plays; both Hairspray and Cry-Baby have been adapted, and other films have spurred subsequent theatrical adaptations. Spamalot is a Broadway play based on Monty Python films. In a rare case of a film being adapted from a stage musical adaptation of a film, in 2005, the film adaptation of the stage musical based on Mel Brooks' classic comedy film The Producers was released.

See also

References

  1. ^ Lavigne, Carlen (27 February 2014). Remake Television: Reboot, Re-use, Recycle. Lexington Books. p. 22. ISBN 9780739183342. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
  2. ^ Black, Anna (2016). ""...for a father hear a child!" Schubert's Ave Maria and the film 2BR02B". The Schubertian. The Schubert Institute (UK). July (91): 16–19.
  3. ^ Masson, Sophie (October 19, 2016). "2BR02B: the journey of a dystopian film–an interview with Leon Coward". Feathers of the Firebird (Interview).
  4. ^ Barnet, Sylvan (1998) [1966]. "The Shrew on Stage and Screen". In Heilman, Robert B. (ed.). The Taming of the Shrew. Signet Classic Shakespeare (Second Revised ed.). New York: New American Library. p. 188. ISBN 9780451526793.
  5. ^ McKernan, Luke and Terris, Olwen (eds.) Walking Shadows: Shakespeare in the National Film and Television Archive (British Film Institute Publishing, 1994). The authors list 45 uses of Hamlet which do not include films of the play itself, on pp.45-66. They list 39 such instances for Romeo and Juliet on pp.141-156, and 23 uses of Othello, on pp.119-131.
  6. ^ Diaz, Lav (December 31, 1988). "Kuwentong seks" [Sex story]. Manila Standard (in Filipino). Manila Standard News, Inc. p. 16. Retrieved August 24, 2020. Eksplusibong dramang hango sa komiks ang Magkano...
  7. ^ Lo, Ricky (April 4, 2005). "How Carlo J. created Panday". Philstar.com. Philstar Global Corp. Retrieved June 13, 2020.
  8. ^ Paculan, Virgie (February 26, 1988). "'Our movies have not changed...' – Lupita Kashiwahara". Manila Standard. Standard Publications, Inc. p. 11. Retrieved January 15, 2023.
  9. ^ Mendelson, Scott (November 9, 2019). "Box Office: Joker Becomes The Most Profitable Comic Book Movie Ever". Forbes. Retrieved November 9, 2019.
  10. ^ . Canada.com. Archived from the original on 2012-11-06.
  11. ^ Donahue, Ann; Swanson, Tim (December 19, 2000). "H'wood hits paydirt in playtime". Variety. Retrieved February 1, 2023.
  12. ^ a b c d e Whitten, Sarah (February 14, 2020). "'Sonic the Hedgehog' is up against the stigma of video game flops at the box office". CNBC. Retrieved February 16, 2020.
  13. ^ Whitten, Sarah (May 10, 2019). "'Detective Pikachu' doesn't escape the pitfalls of previous video game adaptations but is poised for a record-breaking opening weekend". CNBC. Retrieved February 16, 2020.
  14. ^ McDonald, Andy (June 4, 2018). "'It Was a Living Hell': The Game-Over Making of the 'Super Mario Bros.' Movie, 25 Years Later". Playboy. Retrieved February 16, 2020.
  15. ^ . Edge Magazine. November 27, 2007. Archived from the original on May 3, 2012. Retrieved August 9, 2010.
  16. ^ Morris, Chris (August 21, 2015). "Shigeru Miyamoto Talks Nintendo's Return to the Movie World". Fortune. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  17. ^ Cook, Meghan (19 August 2019). "Popular movies inspired by video games, ranked from worst to best". Business Insider. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
  18. ^ Kroll, Justin (May 28, 2020). "'Sonic the Hedgehog' Sequel in the Works". Variety.com. Retrieved May 28, 2020.
  19. ^ McClintlock, Pamela (April 10, 2022). "Box Office: 'Sonic the Hedgehog 2' Booms With $71M Bow, 'Ambulance' DOA". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved April 10, 2022.
  20. ^ Barasch, Alex (December 26, 2022). "Can "The Last of Us" Break the Curse of Bad Video-Game Adaptations?". New Yorker. Retrieved January 15, 2023.
  21. ^ Deitz, Mik (January 13, 2023). "A Conversation about the Conversation about Videogame Adaptations". Paste. Retrieved January 15, 2023.
  22. ^ Wong, Jacky (January 26, 2023). "'The Last of Us' Is Just the Start for Sony". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved January 28, 2023.
  23. ^ . Metro News. Archived from the original on 2016-10-27. Retrieved 2019-09-05.
  24. ^ Hughes, William (February 7, 2019). "Paul W.S. Anderson's latest video game adaptation is starting to sound pretty kick-ass". The A.V. Club. Retrieved February 16, 2020.
  25. ^ "Melanie adaptation Genie returned". Cinema Canada, No. 96 (May 1983). p. 12.
  26. ^ "Oscars: Moonlight ineligible for Best Original Screenplay". Entertainment Weekly, December 15, 2016.

Further reading

  • Eisenstein, Sergei. "Dickens, Griffith, and the Film Today." Film Form Dennis Dobson, trans. 1951.
  • Literature/Film Quarterly, journal published by Salisbury University
  • Journal of Adaptation in Film and Performance, published by Intellect
  • Adaptation, journal published by Oxford University Press
  • Movie Adaptation Database, UC Berkeley Media Resources Center
  • The history of Erich von Stroheim's Greed, from welcometosilentmovies.com
  • The Art of Adaptation from hollywoodlitsales.com
  • Hutcheon, Linda, with Siobhan O’Flynn. A Theory of Adaptation. 2nd ed. London: Routledge, 2013.
  • Leitch, Thomas (ed.) Oxford Handbook of Adaptation Studies. Oxford: OUP, 2017.
  • Murray, Simone. The Adaptation Industry: The Cultural Economy of Contemporary Adaptation. New York: Routledge, 2012.
  • Sanders, Julie. Adaptation and Appropriation. London: Routledge, 2006.

film, adaptation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, july, 202. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Film adaptation news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message A film adaptation is the transfer of a work or story in whole or in part to a feature film Although often considered a type of derivative work film adaptation has been conceptualized recently by academic scholars such as Robert Stam as a dialogic process While the most common form of film adaptation is the use of a novel as the basis other works adapted into films include non fiction including journalism autobiographical works comic books scriptures plays historical sources and even other films Adaptation from such diverse resources has been a ubiquitous practice of filmmaking since the earliest days of cinema in nineteenth century Europe In contrast to when making a remake movie directors usually take more creative liberties when creating a film adaptation 1 Contents 1 Elision and interpolation 2 Interpretation as adaptation 3 Theatrical adaptation 4 Television adaptation 5 Radio adaptation 6 Comic book adaptation 7 Video game adaptation 8 Adaptations from other sources 9 Awards 10 Adaptation of films 11 See also 12 References 13 Further readingElision and interpolation EditIn 1924 Erich von Stroheim attempted a literal adaptation of Frank Norris s novel McTeague with his film Greed The resulting film was 9 hours long and was cut to four hours at studio insistence It was then cut again without Stroheim s input to around two hours The result was a film that was largely incoherent Since that time few directors have attempted to put everything in a novel into a film Therefore elision is all but essential In some cases film adaptations also interpolate scenes or invent characters This is especially true when a novel is part of a literary saga Incidents or quotations from later or earlier novels will be inserted into a single film Additionally and far more controversially filmmakers will invent new characters or create stories that were not present in the source material at all Given the anticipated audience for a film the screenwriter director or movie studio may wish to increase character time or to invent new characters For example William J Kennedy s Pulitzer Prize winning novel Ironweed included a short appearance by a prostitute named Helen Because the film studio anticipated a female audience for the film and had Meryl Streep for the role Helen became a significant part of the film However characters are also sometimes invented to provide the narrative voice Interpretation as adaptation EditThere have been several notable cases of massive inventive adaptation including the Roland Joffe adaptation of The Scarlet Letter with explicit sex between Hester Prynn and the minister and Native American obscene puns into a major character and the film s villain The Charlie Kaufman and Donald Kaufman penned Adaptation credited as an adaptation of the novel The Orchid Thief was an intentional satire and commentary on the process of film adaptation itself All of those are cases of Nathaniel Hawthorne s point The creators of the Gulliver s Travels miniseries interpolated a sanity trial to reflect the ongoing scholarly debate over whether or not Gulliver himself is sane at the conclusion of Book IV In those cases adaptation is a form of criticism and recreation as well as translation Change is essential and practically unavoidable mandated both by the constraints of time and medium but how much is always a balance Some film theorists have argued that a director should be entirely unconcerned with the source as a novel is a novel and a film is a film and the two works of art must be seen as separate entities Since a transcription of a novel into film is impossible even holding up a goal of accuracy is absurd Others argue that what a film adaptation does is change to fit literally adapt and the film must be accurate to the effect aesthetics the theme or the message of a novel and that the filmmaker must introduce changes if necessary to fit the demands of time and to maximize faithfulness along one of those axes In most cases adaptation the films are required to create identities for example a characters costume or set decor since they are not specified in the original material Then the influence of film makers may go unrecognized because there is no comparison in the original material even though the new visual identities will affect narrative interpretation Peter Jackson s adaptations of The Lord of the Rings trilogy and The Hobbit by author JRR Tolkien represent an unusual case since many visual and stylistic details were specified by Tolkien For the Harry Potter film series author JK Rowling was closely consulted by the filmmakers and she provided production designer Stuart Craig with a map of Hogwarts grounds and also prevented director Alfonso Cuaron from adding a graveyard scene because the graveyard would appear elsewhere in a later novel An often overlooked aspect of film adaptation is the inclusion of sound and music In a literary text a specific sound effect can often be implied or specified by an event but in the process of adaptation filmmakers must determine specific the sound characteristics that subliminally affects narrative interpretation In some cases of adaptation music may have been specified in the original material usually diegetic music In Stephenie Meyer s 2005 Twilight novel the characters Edward Cullen and Bella Swan both listen to Debussy s Clair de lune and Edward composes the piece Bella s Lullaby for Bella While Clair de lune was a pre existing piece of music Bella s Lullaby was not and required original music to be composed for the 2008 movie adaptation In the 2016 sci fi film 2BR02B To Be or Naught to Be adapted from the story by Kurt Vonnegut the film makers decided to abandon Vonnegut s choice of music They stated that they felt that it worked in his prose only because it was not actually heard Filmmakers test screenings found that Vonnegut s style of music confused audiences and detracted from narrative comprehension The film s composer Leon Coward stated You can try to be as true to Vonnegut s material as possible but at the end of the day also you re working with the material that you as a team have generated not just Vonnegut s and that s what you ve got to make work 2 3 Theatrical adaptation EditSee also List of plays adapted into feature films and Stage to film adaptation Stage plays are frequent sources for film adaptations Many of William Shakespeare s plays including Hamlet Romeo and Juliet and Othello have been adapted into films The first sound adaptation of any Shakespeare play was the 1929 production of The Taming of the Shrew starring Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks 4 It was later adapted as both a musical play called Kiss Me Kate which opened on Broadway in 1948 and as the 1953 Hollywood musical of the same name The Taming of the Shrew was again retold in 1999 as a teen comedy set in a high school in 10 Things I Hate about You and also in 2003 as an urban romantic comedy Deliver Us from Eva The 1961 musical film West Side Story was adapted from Romeo and Juliet with its first incarnation as a Broadway musical play that opened in 1957 The animated film The Lion King 1994 was inspired by Hamlet as well as various traditional African myths and 2001 s O was based on Othello Film adaptations of Shakespeare s works in languages other than English are numerous including Akira Kurosawa s films Throne of Blood 1957 an epic film version of Macbeth The Bad Sleep Well 1960 inspired by Hamlet and Ran 1985 based on King Lear and Vishal Bhardwaj s Shakespearean trilogy consisting of Haider 2014 a retelling of Hamlet Omkara 2006 based on Othello and Maqbool 2003 based on Macbeth Another way in which Shakespearean texts have been incorporated in films is to feature characters who are either actors performing those texts or characters who are somehow influenced or effected by seeing one of Shakespeare s plays within a larger non Shakespearean story Generally Shakespeare s basic themes or certain elements of the plot will parallel the main plot of the film or become part of a character s development in some way Hamlet and Romeo and Juliet are the two plays which have most often been used in this way 5 Eric Rohmer s 1992 film Conte d hiver A Tale of Winter is one example Rohmer uses one scene from Shakepeare s A Winter s Tale as a major plot device within a story that is not based on the play at all In Britain where stage plays tend to be more popular as a form of entertainment than currently in the United States many films began as a stage productions Some British films and British American collaborations that were based on successful British plays include Gaslight 1940 Blithe Spirit 1945 Rope 1948 Look Back in Anger 1959 Oh What a Lovely War 1969 Sleuth 1972 The Rocky Horror Picture Show 1975 Shirley Valentine 1989 The Madness of King George 1994 The History Boys 2006 Quartet 2012 and The Lady in the Van 2015 Similarly hit Broadway plays are often adapted into films whether from musicals or dramas Some examples of American film adaptations based on successful Broadway plays are Arsenic and Old Lace 1944 Born Yesterday 1950 Harvey 1950 A Streetcar Named Desire 1951 The Odd Couple 1968 The Boys in the Band 1970 Agnes of God 1985 Children of a Lesser God 1986 Glengarry Glen Ross 1992 Real Women Have Curves 2002 Rabbit Hole 2010 and Fences 2016 On one hand theatrical adaptation does not involve as many interpolations or elisions as novel adaptation but on the other the demands of scenery and possibilities of motion frequently entail changes from one medium to the other Film critics will often mention if an adapted play has a static camera or emulates a proscenium arch Laurence Olivier consciously imitated the arch with his Henry V 1944 having the camera begin to move and to use color stock after the prologue indicating the passage from physical to imaginative space Sometimes the adaptive process can continue after one translation Mel Brooks The Producers began as a film in 1967 was adapted into a Broadway musical in 2001 and then adapted again in 2005 as a musical film Television adaptation EditFeature films are occasionally created from television series or television segments or vice versa a television series will derive from a film such as in the case of Bates Motel and Chucky In the former the film will offer a longer storyline than the usual television program s format and or expanded production values During the 1970s many UK television series were turned into films including Dad s Army On the Buses Steptoe and Son and Porridge In 1979 The Muppet Movie was a big success In the adaptation of The X Files to film greater effects and a longer plotline were involved Additionally adaptations of television shows will offer the viewer the opportunity to see the television show s characters without broadcast restrictions These additions nudity profanity explicit drug use and explicit violence are only rarely a featured adaptive addition film versions of procedurals such as Miami Vice are most inclined to such additions as featured adaptations South Park Bigger Longer amp Uncut is a notable example of a film being more explicit than its parent TV series At the same time some theatrically released films are adaptations of television miniseries events When national film boards and state controlled television networks co exist filmmakers can sometimes create very long films for television that they may adapt solely for time for theatrical release Both Ingmar Bergman notably with Fanny and Alexander but with other films as well and Lars von Trier have created long television films that they then recut for international distribution Even segments of television series have been adapted into feature films The American television sketch comedy show Saturday Night Live has been the origin of a number of films beginning with The Blues Brothers which began as a one off performance by Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi Radio adaptation EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2008 Radio narratives have also provided the basis of film adaptation In the heyday of radio radio segments were often translated to film usually as shorts Radio series turned into film series include Dr Christian Crime Doctor and The Whistler Dialog heavy stories and fantastic stories from radio were also adapted to film e g Fibber McGee and Molly and The Life of Riley The Hitchhiker s Guide to the Galaxy began as a radio series for the BBC and then became a novel that was adapted to film Comic book adaptation EditSee also List of films based on comics American comic book characters particularly superheroes have long been adapted into film beginning in the 1940s with Saturday movie serials aimed at children Superman 1978 and Batman 1989 are two later successful movie adaptations of famous comic book characters In the Philippines superhero comics have been adapted numerous times into films such as Darna 1951 Captain Barbell 1964 and Lastik Man 1965 In addition comics of various genres other than those involving superheroes such as romance 6 fantasy 7 and drama 8 have widely been used as a source for film adaptations such as Roberta 1951 Dyesebel 1953 Ang Panday 1980 Bituing Walang Ningning 1985 and Mars Ravelo s Bondying The Little Big Boy 1989 In the early 2000s blockbusters such as X Men 2000 and Spider Man 2002 have led to dozens of superhero films The success of these films has also led to other comic books not necessarily about superheroes being adapted for the big screen such as Ghost World 2001 From Hell 2001 American Splendor 2003 Sin City 2005 300 2007 Wanted 2008 and Whiteout 2009 The adaptation process for comics is different from that of novels Many successful comic book series last for several decades and have featured several variations of the characters in that time Films based on such series usually try to capture the back story and spirit of the character instead of adapting a particular storyline Occasionally aspects of the characters and their origins are simplified or modernized Self contained graphic novels and miniseries many of which do not feature superheroes can be adapted more directly such as in the case of Road to Perdition 2002 or V for Vendetta 2006 In particular Robert Rodriguez did not use a screenplay for Sin City but utilized actual panels from writer artist Frank Miller s series as storyboards to create what Rodriguez regards as a translation rather than an adaptation Furthermore some films based on long running franchises use particular story lines from the franchise as a basis for a plot The second X Men film was loosely based on the graphic novel X Men God Loves Man Kills and the third film on the storyline The Dark Phoenix Saga Spider Man 2 was based on the storyline Spider Man No More Likewise Batman Begins owes many of its elements to Miller s Batman Year One and the film s sequel The Dark Knight uses subplots from Batman The Long Halloween The Marvel Cinematic Universe starting in 2008 is a shared universe with films combining characters from different works by Marvel Comics The DC Extended Universe starting in 2013 uses the same model for DC Comics The highest grossing and most profitable comic book adaptations are Avengers Endgame 2019 and Joker 2019 respectively 9 Video game adaptation EditMain article Tie in Video game Tie in video games with films or other properties have existed since home consoles and arcade games of the early 1980s Developers are usually limited by what they can do with the film property and may be further limited in time as to produce the game in time for the release of the film or other work 10 11 See also List of films based on video games Category Video games adapted for other media Category Lists of works based on video games and Hollywood and the video game industry Video games have also been adapted into films beginning in the early 1980s Films closely related to the computer and video game industries were also done in this time such as Tron and Cloak amp Dagger but only after the release of several films based on well known brands has this genre become recognized in its own right Video game films can take several forms such as live action works like Super Mario Bros traditionally animated such as films based on the Pokemon franchise or computer animated such as Final Fantasy The Spirits Within There also exist original video animations OVAs based on popular games such as Street Fighter Alpha The Animation Similar to comic book based films in the past especially from 1980s films based on video games tend to carry a reputation of lackluster quality and receive negative reaction from both film critics and fans of the source material 12 This is generally due to difficulties in adopting a story meant to be played interactively into a linear movie going experience 13 Some such as Super Mario Bros were particularly negatively received and are considered among the worst films ever made Super Mario Bros was criticized for being too dark violent and unfaithful in plot to the popular video game series 14 Another likely reason for the failure of video game adaptations is that structural conversion from video game to film format can be challenging for filmmakers Shigeru Miyamoto creator of Nintendo franchises including Mario and Zelda said in a 2007 interview I think that part of the problem with translating games to movies is that the structure of what makes a good game is very different from the structure of what makes a good movie Movies are a much more passive medium where the movie itself is telling a story and you as the viewer are relaxing and taking that in passively Whereas video games are a much more active medium where you are playing along with the story I think that video games as a whole have a very simple flow in terms of what s going on in the game We make that flow entertaining by implementing many different elements to the video game to keep the player entertained Movies have much more complex stories or flow to them but the elements that affect that flow are limited in number So I think that because these surrounding elements in these two different mediums vary so greatly when you fail to take that into account then you run into problems 15 In an interview with Fortune in August 2015 Miyamoto said Because games and movies seem like similar mediums people s natural expectation is we want to take our games and turn them into movies I ve always felt video games being an interactive medium and movies being a passive medium mean the two are quite different 16 Until 2019 no video game film live action or animated had received a Rotten Tomatoes fresh rating with a score over 60 Three films since Detective Pikachu The Angry Birds Movie 2 and Sonic the Hedgehog have been able to break into the fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes 17 12 Both Detective Pikachu and Sonic the Hedgehog have posted better than expected domestic takes 12 with Sonic having the highest domestic opening through 2020 18 Sonic s success led to its sequel Sonic the Hedgehog 2 releasing in April 2022 and beating the first film s domestic opening and also receiving a slightly higher score on Rotten Tomatoes 19 Following these films new adaptions of games into films and television series became successful and showed that adaptions that held to a game s story but did not try to maintain the video game aspects were more popular with audiences Shows such as Arcane Cyberpunk Edgerunners and The Last of Us were all critically praised series based on video games from 2021 through 2023 20 21 22 Though video game films are critically panned they tend to do well from the international take at box offices Warcraft based on the World of Warcraft game holds the highest take of any video game adaptation with US 433 6 million while the six Resident Evil films hold the highest take for a series of US 1 2 billion on an average production budget between US 30 to 50 million 12 Other financially successful video game films include Mortal Kombat Lara Croft Tomb Raider Uncharted Assassin s Creed Silent Hill and Prince of Persia The Sands of Time 12 Among the most well known video game filmmakers is Uwe Boll a German writer director and producer whose works include House of the Dead Alone in the Dark BloodRayne In the Name of the King A Dungeon Siege Tale Postal and Far Cry all of which were almost universally panned by critics In 2016 he retired from filmmaking citing market failures and funding difficulties 23 Similarly Paul W S Anderson has gained a reputation for his panned video game adaptations particularly the first Mortal Kombat despite positive reviews the Resident Evil series and most recently Monster Hunter 24 Adaptations from other sources EditSee also Category Films based on works While documentary films have often been made from journalism and reportage so too have some dramatic films including All the President s Men 1976 adapted from the 1974 book Miracle 2004 from an account published shortly after the 1980 miracle on ice and Pushing Tin 1999 from a 1996 New York Times article by Darcy Frey An Inconvenient Truth is Al Gore s film adaptation of his own Keynote multimedia presentation The 2011 independent comedy film Benjamin Sniddlegrass and the Cauldron of Penguins was based on Kermode and Mayo s Film Review of Percy Jackson amp the Olympians The Lightning Thief Films adapted from songs include Coward of the County Ode to Billy Joe Convoy and Pretty Baby each from a song of the same name Films based on toys include the Transformers franchise and the G I Joe films there is a longer history of animated television series being created simultaneous to toy lines as a marketing tool Hasbro s plans to for films based on their board games began with 2012 s Battleship While amusement park rides have often been based on action movies conversely the 1967 Pirates of the Caribbean ride at Disneyland was adapted into Pirates of the Caribbean The Curse of the Black Pearl in 2003 Remakes and film sequels are technically adaptations of the original film Less direct derivations include The Magnificent Seven from The Seven Samurai Star Wars from The Hidden Fortress and Twelve Monkeys from La Jetee Many films have been made from mythology and religious texts Both Greek mythology and the Bible have been adapted frequently Homer s works have been adapted multiple times in several nations In these cases the audience already knows the story well and so the adaptation will de emphasize elements of suspense and concentrate instead on detail and phrasing original research Awards EditMany major film award programs present an award for adapted screenplays separate from the award for original screenplays In the case of a film which was adapted from an unpublished work however different awards have different rules around which category the screenplay qualifies for In 1983 the Canadian Genie Awards rescinded the Best Adapted Screenplay award they had presented to the film Melanie when they learned that the original work had been unpublished 25 and in 2017 the film Moonlight which was adapted from an unpublished theatrical play was classified and nominated as an adapted screenplay by some awards but as an original screenplay by others 26 Adaptation of films EditWhen a film s screenplay is original it can also be the source of derivative works such as novels and plays For example movie studios will commission novelizations of their popular titles or sell the rights to their titles to publishing houses These novelized films will frequently be written on assignment and sometimes written by authors who have only an early script as their source Consequently novelizations are quite often changed from the films as they appear in theatres Novelization can build up characters and incidents for commercial reasons e g to market a card or computer game to promote the publisher s saga of novels or to create continuity between films in a series There have been instances of novelists who have worked from their own screenplays to create novels at nearly the same time as a film Both Arthur C Clarke with 2001 A Space Odyssey and Graham Greene with The Third Man have worked from their own film ideas to a novel form although the novel version of The Third Man was written more to aid in the development of the screenplay than for the purposes of being released as a novel Both John Sayles and Ingmar Bergman write their film ideas as novels before they begin producing them as films although neither director has allowed these prose treatments to be published Finally films have inspired and been adapted into plays John Waters s films have been successfully mounted as plays both Hairspray and Cry Baby have been adapted and other films have spurred subsequent theatrical adaptations Spamalot is a Broadway play based on Monty Python films In a rare case of a film being adapted from a stage musical adaptation of a film in 2005 the film adaptation of the stage musical based on Mel Brooks classic comedy film The Producers was released See also EditRemake Literary adaptation Adaptation arts AACTA Award for Best Adapted Screenplay Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay BAFTA Award for Best Adapted Screenplay Cesar Award for Best Adaptation Golden Horse Award for Best Adapted Screenplay Goya Award for Best Adapted Screenplay Satellite Award for Best Adapted Screenplay Writers Guild of America Award for Best Adapted ScreenplayReferences Edit Lavigne Carlen 27 February 2014 Remake Television Reboot Re use Recycle Lexington Books p 22 ISBN 9780739183342 Retrieved 22 July 2021 Black Anna 2016 for a father hear a child Schubert s Ave Maria and the film 2BR02B The Schubertian The Schubert Institute UK July 91 16 19 Masson Sophie October 19 2016 2BR02B the journey of a dystopian film an interview with Leon Coward Feathers of the Firebird Interview Barnet Sylvan 1998 1966 The Shrew on Stage and Screen In Heilman Robert B ed The Taming of the Shrew Signet Classic Shakespeare Second Revised ed New York New American Library p 188 ISBN 9780451526793 McKernan Luke and Terris Olwen eds Walking Shadows Shakespeare in the National Film and Television Archive British Film Institute Publishing 1994 The authors list 45 uses of Hamlet which do not include films of the play itself on pp 45 66 They list 39 such instances for Romeo and Juliet on pp 141 156 and 23 uses of Othello on pp 119 131 Diaz Lav December 31 1988 Kuwentong seks Sex story Manila Standard in Filipino Manila Standard News Inc p 16 Retrieved August 24 2020 Eksplusibong dramang hango sa komiks ang Magkano Lo Ricky April 4 2005 How Carlo J created Panday Philstar com Philstar Global Corp Retrieved June 13 2020 Paculan Virgie February 26 1988 Our movies have not changed Lupita Kashiwahara Manila Standard Standard Publications Inc p 11 Retrieved January 15 2023 Mendelson Scott November 9 2019 Box Office Joker Becomes The Most Profitable Comic Book Movie Ever Forbes Retrieved November 9 2019 Hollywood and video game industry profit from movie tie ins Canada com Archived from the original on 2012 11 06 Donahue Ann Swanson Tim December 19 2000 H wood hits paydirt in playtime Variety Retrieved February 1 2023 a b c d e Whitten Sarah February 14 2020 Sonic the Hedgehog is up against the stigma of video game flops at the box office CNBC Retrieved February 16 2020 Whitten Sarah May 10 2019 Detective Pikachu doesn t escape the pitfalls of previous video game adaptations but is poised for a record breaking opening weekend CNBC Retrieved February 16 2020 McDonald Andy June 4 2018 It Was a Living Hell The Game Over Making of the Super Mario Bros Movie 25 Years Later Playboy Retrieved February 16 2020 Miyamoto The Interview Edge Magazine November 27 2007 Archived from the original on May 3 2012 Retrieved August 9 2010 Morris Chris August 21 2015 Shigeru Miyamoto Talks Nintendo s Return to the Movie World Fortune Retrieved 3 April 2018 Cook Meghan 19 August 2019 Popular movies inspired by video games ranked from worst to best Business Insider Retrieved 31 August 2019 Kroll Justin May 28 2020 Sonic the Hedgehog Sequel in the Works Variety com Retrieved May 28 2020 McClintlock Pamela April 10 2022 Box Office Sonic the Hedgehog 2 Booms With 71M Bow Ambulance DOA The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved April 10 2022 Barasch Alex December 26 2022 Can The Last of Us Break the Curse of Bad Video Game Adaptations New Yorker Retrieved January 15 2023 Deitz Mik January 13 2023 A Conversation about the Conversation about Videogame Adaptations Paste Retrieved January 15 2023 Wong Jacky January 26 2023 The Last of Us Is Just the Start for Sony The Wall Street Journal Retrieved January 28 2023 The market is dead Schlock director Uwe Boll s Rampage of terrible films is finished Metro News Archived from the original on 2016 10 27 Retrieved 2019 09 05 Hughes William February 7 2019 Paul W S Anderson s latest video game adaptation is starting to sound pretty kick ass The A V Club Retrieved February 16 2020 Melanie adaptation Genie returned Cinema Canada No 96 May 1983 p 12 Oscars Moonlight ineligible for Best Original Screenplay Entertainment Weekly December 15 2016 Further reading EditEisenstein Sergei Dickens Griffith and the Film Today Film Form Dennis Dobson trans 1951 Literature Film Quarterly journal published by Salisbury University Journal of Adaptation in Film and Performance published by Intellect Adaptation journal published by Oxford University Press Movie Adaptation Database UC Berkeley Media Resources Center The history of Erich von Stroheim s Greed from welcometosilentmovies com The Art of Adaptation from hollywoodlitsales com Hutcheon Linda with Siobhan O Flynn A Theory of Adaptation 2nd ed London Routledge 2013 Leitch Thomas ed Oxford Handbook of Adaptation Studies Oxford OUP 2017 Murray Simone The Adaptation Industry The Cultural Economy of Contemporary Adaptation New York Routledge 2012 Sanders Julie Adaptation and Appropriation London Routledge 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Film adaptation amp oldid 1138544721, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.