PDA

View Full Version : Graphic novels and movies



xripper
08-14-2011, 07:40 PM
What is your opinion on the movies that are being inspired or copied from popular graphic novels?
There are many examples like Scott Pilgrims, Kick Ass and Tintin(which is soon to hit the box office).
Do you prefer the novel with their original colorful characters or your favorite movie star in those avatars?

Startear
10-13-2011, 03:53 PM
The movie can never replace original graphic novel. V for Vendetta is the example. Graphic novel was one of the best I ever read, but movie completely destroyed the point.

TorGil
11-08-2011, 03:49 PM
I think a good movie can add a lot to some comic books. But a lot of times, the writers focus on the visual look of the comic, instead of the story behind them. I think too that superheroes should be on tv and not film, since their adventures are serial, not individual.

blankfield
11-12-2011, 06:03 PM
Movies have always borrowed from comics and graphic novels. The film itself really depends on whether or not it is true to the original book or not. Sometimes it's great that filmmakers can "fill in the blanks" with live action sequences but when we read comics/gn we put our own voices, pacing, etc. into them. Films do that for us and it's not always "right."

Quarterquack
11-21-2011, 06:48 AM
Comic to movie transitions will always fail, even though standalone and branding aside, each can be mutually exclusively great.

The problem is the medium transition. Comics are from a time where people explored and re-explored concepts that movies attended to decades earlier: Think a comic commenting on the state of affairs of a man at a newspaper stand as a reader proxy. Now think about a movie doing the same in 40's. Even though comics were the rage up to the early nineties, they can't add anything new to movies, and the only reason they were mass adopted was because of what you can do frame-to-frame. Maintaining a character's expression between scene transitions, juxtaposing two different scenes on the same page, so on and so forth. A medium conversion will always do injustice to the creativity of how the comics originally played out because like it or not the characters were designed to be page-based. That and [EDIT:] a majority of north american movie goers always want a happy ending. Things couldn't be farther from the truth in the comic world, which is why things like Hellboy should definitely stay in print and only as such.

IdolEyes787
11-21-2011, 04:39 PM
Comic to movie transitions will always fail, even though standalone and branding aside, each can be mutually exclusively great.

The problem is the medium transition. Comics are from a time where people explored and re-explored concepts that movies attended to decades earlier: Think a comic commenting on the state of affairs of a man at a newspaper stand as a reader proxy. Now think about a movie doing the same in 40's. Even though comics were the rage up to the early nineties, they can't add anything new to movies, and the only reason they were mass adopted was because of what you can do frame-to-frame. Maintaining a character's expression between scene transitions, juxtaposing two different scenes on the same page, so on and so forth. A medium conversion will always do injustice to the creativity of how the comics originally played out because like it or not the characters were designed to be page-based. That and [EDIT:] a majority of north american movie goers always want a happy ending. Things couldn't be farther from the truth in the comic world, which is why things like Hellboy should definitely stay in print and only as such.

It's amazing that you can put so much unnecessary thought into things and still be so consistently wrong.

Quarterquack
11-21-2011, 07:04 PM
It's amazing that you can put so much unnecessary thought into things and still be so consistently wrong.

Don't have the energy to liberate your opinion, or were you simply content with the day's work of putting people down on movie fora?

IdolEyes787
11-21-2011, 11:45 PM
Fora, like why not just wear a t-shirt that says "I'm a pretentious bastard " and simplify things?

As for my opinion ,succinctly I think it goes something like "they are called adaptions for a reason".Or maybe "Movies are either good ,bad or someplace in the middle and not adhering to the structure of a totally different media doesn't have a whole fucking lot to do with which of those categories they wind up in.

Wait on second thought I've never really liked people trying to swim on dry land since the whole exercise takes away from the grace and athleticism of what Nature intended.Fucking artless land swimmers.

kitsunisan
11-24-2011, 03:26 AM
But sometimes the movie will completely alter what ws done in the comic, such as Kick-Ass. I guess you could call it an adaptation, Mark Millar called the movie based on his comics a "chick flick".

bijutoha
06-21-2012, 10:06 AM
I think Movie that inspired from Comic there has a point that when a comic is getting enough popularity then it is going to end by the movie. because some people who unknown about the comic they also informed by easy way .

IdolEyes787
06-23-2012, 12:38 AM
I think Movie that inspired from Comic there has a point that when a comic is getting enough popularity then it is going to end by the movie. because some people who unknown about the comic they also informed by easy way .

Yes.

WearAngels
07-24-2012, 05:43 PM
I think movies which were inspired from a book will never be fully detailed show all the scenes being illustrated originally from the book. One example of which was the twilight Movies, some of those scenes in the movie doesn't have a similarity as what is being written in the book.

Aklian
06-28-2013, 07:36 AM
I am telling you about a movie in which awesome kind of graphics work is used and the name of that movie is "Ozz the great and powerful". Awesome kind of graphics and color combination are used in this movie and also i watched this movie in 3D therefore it was a great fun to watch it.