Maximum Overdrive..

DaBossIsBack

New member
Jun 28, 2013
3,359
1,917
0
It's hard to take a book to screen and pull it off. Very few directors can do it. Kubrick was great at it but he did take liberties with the original work. Fincher is another great director at adapting books. Outside of Kubrick he might be the best at it.
 

Get Buckets

Well-known member
Nov 4, 2007
4,532
1,396
92
It's hard to take a book to screen and pull it off. Very few directors can do it. Kubrick was great at it but he did take liberties with the original work. Fincher is another great director at adapting books. Outside of Kubrick he might be the best at it.

Francis Ford Coppola was pretty solid at it.
 
  • Like
Reactions: DaBossIsBack

BlueRaider22

New member
Sep 24, 2003
15,562
1,858
0
It's hard to take a book to screen and pull it off. Very few directors can do it. Kubrick was great at it but he did take liberties with the original work. Fincher is another great director at adapting books. Outside of Kubrick he might be the best at it.

I don't know that it's that hard.

http://www.paperbackswap.com/Books-Made-Movies/tag/8969/

This is one single google search that brought up nearly 400. Granted a lot of the movies weren't great, but I'd argue that a lot of those books weren't great either. And, of course, there are many, many more.

This argument usually gets brought up by "book people" that often get offended by the movies on some personal level.

I've always viewed them as two entities that each have their pluses/minuses. For example, a book will describe the scene in detail telling you the thoughts and feelings of a character, but it's up to you to imagine what that character or scene looks like. Movies are just the opposite. You are presented with the visual and you must imagine the abstract.
 

DaBossIsBack

New member
Jun 28, 2013
3,359
1,917
0
I don't know that it's that hard.

http://www.paperbackswap.com/Books-Made-Movies/tag/8969/

This is one single google search that brought up nearly 400. Granted a lot of the movies weren't great, but I'd argue that a lot of those books weren't great either. And, of course, there are many, many more.

This argument usually gets brought up by "book people" that often get offended by the movies on some personal level.

I've always viewed them as two entities that each have their pluses/minuses. For example, a book will describe the scene in detail telling you the thoughts and feelings of a character, but it's up to you to imagine what that character or scene looks like. Movies are just the opposite. You are presented with the visual and you must imagine the abstract.
I guess I should have been more specific. It's hard to take good books and make good movies out of them. I view them the same way as you; separate entities. I'm a film guy. I prefer film to books. When I do read the book before the film I tend to be disappointed with the film. I learned this years ago and since then I always watch the movie first. It actually enhances the book for me. It's weird. The martian for example. I've wanted to read this book for a year now but I knew Scott was adapting it to the screen. It's setting on my shelf and I'll read it after I watch the film.
 

UKwizard

Well-known member
Dec 11, 2002
21,060
1,960
113
Peter Jackson took the lord of the rings and kept all the best parts while improving on the shaky aspects

The books are WAY better and I think the movies are incredible. He did make a couple of grievous changes tho.
 

dezyDeco

New member
Nov 9, 2014
5,290
876
0
I

a book will describe the scene in detail telling you the thoughts and feelings of a character, but it's up to you to imagine what that character or scene looks like. Movies are just the opposite. You are presented with the visual and you must imagine the abstract.


That's a good way to sum it up.

The Jaws-movie ending is a perfect example of that... we just had to see that critter get blown up! IMHO, that ending was about the shark, while the book's ending is about Brody.
 

LadyCaytIL

Well-known member
Oct 28, 2012
31,925
7,827
113
Maximum overdrive is one of those WTH were they thinking type of great movies.
 

rabidcatfan

New member
Jan 25, 2003
9,198
272
0
'Maximum Overdrive' is pure schlock, but that's what makes it good. It's incredibly silly, but I loved the premise that Earth passed through the tail of a comet and all the machines on the planet came alive to try and kill us. I also like the idea at the end that an alien spacecraft was destroyed shortly after Earth passed through the tail of the comet indicating that the machines were likely brought to life by the aliens and intended to eradicate the human population and that the aliens were going to possibly invade us afterwards, letting the machines do the dirty work for them.

Although the movie was written and directed by my all-time favorite author, Stephen King, it definitely could've done with a wash or two by a seasoned script doctor and could've been better in the hands of proven director like Tobe Hooper, Wes Craven, or Joe Dante.
 

JHB4UK

New member
May 29, 2001
31,836
2,637
0
I also like the idea at the end that an alien spacecraft was destroyed shortly after Earth passed through the tail of the comet indicating that the machines were likely brought to life by the aliens and intended to eradicate the human population and that the aliens were going to possibly invade us afterwards, letting the machines do the dirty work for them.
the stupidity of that explanation ruins the movie. what blew up the alien spacecraft? ah, a Russian "weather" satellite. why didnt that machine come to life and reject human control exactly?

King's short story (like so many others of his) didnt bother with trying to logically explain why mechanical things came to life and wanted to kill all people. Hollywood's attempt to come up with one of their own is so awful probably Emilio Estevez wrote it.
 

LineSkiCat14

Well-known member
Aug 5, 2015
37,195
4,007
113
One of my favorite horror movies. Definitely a classic. I don't even really like AC/DC but having the movie set to their entire album was awesome. Definitely an element of "cheese" to it, but that's what makes it great.