Book to Screen Adaptations Club
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A Blue-Eyed Daisy

From Cynthia Rylant's Book-To-Screen Series (1994-2000)

Release Date: February 16, 1996

Directed by: Steve C. Stewart

Distributions: CBS Films

Cast [in roles]:
Despina Caldis as Ella Farley
Elias Koteas as Oakey Farley
Jolene Blalock as Carolyn Oaks
Crystal Bailant as Amber Montes
Joy Bryant as Cecila Farley
Susan Anton as Mrs. Rigwell
Kathryn Erbe as Principal
Diana Rigg as School Nurse
Timothy Dalton as Mr. Oaks
Bess Armstrong as Ella's Doctor
Joe Mangtena as Surgical Obstetrician
Patricia Ferris as Hospital Administrator
Bob Ferros as Peaceful Elderly Nursing inicial Patient
June Squibb as Crying...
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The Mortal Instruments, the project left for dead is now back as Lily Collins is re-set to play the story’s lead character Clary Fray. Word of that goes back to 2010 when Collins has been originally set to estrella in the first installment of the novel series City of Bones, but, then, Scott Charles Stewart had been attached to direct for Screen Gems.

Now comes word that Harald Zwart, whose last directing credit was the Karate Kid remake in 2010, is set to direct The Mortal Instruments for Screen Games, which has teamed with Constantin Film and Unique Features to develop the motion picture adaptation...
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Please note that these are my favorito! adaptions, and I am not claiming that they are the best o the most faithful. These are my personal opinions of cine that I believe were were just as great, o even better than the libros they came from.




#5 - Fried Green Tomatoes (1991)
Based on "Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe" por Fannie Flagg
There was a looot of book stuff that didn't make it into the movie. But since I saw the movie before I read the book, I didn't mind. The book provides más backstory on the town and the people in it, and includes a lot of characters that...
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Colleen McCullough hated Meggie Cleary.

The news came as quite a surprise to me, but apparently it’s true. In April 2009, as the best-selling autor worked on the stage musical version of her literary triumph, the UK Daily Mail quoted her directly:

“Meggie in The Thorn Birds is basically my mother. I detested her. Can tu imagine escritura a 280,000-word book and hating your heroine? She was everything I despise in a woman. She suffered and, worst of all, she enjoyed suffering.”

I didn’t pick up on the author’s hatred when lectura the book – far from it – my interpretation was that...
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Copied and edited from: link


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THIS IS VERY URGENT AND NOT A JOKE! ALSO DON'T GOOF OFF!!!!

I really mean it! What would tu be able to do if SOPA/TPP censors the internet? What would tu be able to do if escritura fanfics and drawing fanarts become illegal? What would tu do if it's illegal to do a cover of your favorito! song on YouTube? What would tu do if downloading things from the internet (music, movies, TV episodes, etc) became illegal? What would tu do if SOPA/TPP wins the war and takes away internet freedom? Net Neutrality is already dead so far, we can't risk the freedom of internet...
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Joe Wright is a harsh critic. In the Director’s Commentary of the 2005 feature-length film Pride and Prejudice, he frequently laments that certain scenes of the film just don’t work.

To state just a few, the first meeting of Mr Bingley and the Bennet family at the Meryton Assembly was “not well-shot,” “boring” and “flat”; the artificial lighting was unflattering for Judy Dench’s complexion; and he will think again before ever working with CGI.

Perhaps he was just too close to the project, because I found the film to be a cinematically beautiful, well constructed, and touching...
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I read the libros of this series before seeing the movie as I always do with book to movie adaptions and have just seen the movie. I think they did quite well with it but I'm not sure it lived up to the books. They changed hair colours of Mrs Coulter, Lyra and even Serafina, small details that may not matter too much but is it hard to dye hair? Already that is beside the point as the actors playing the characters did a very good job and i think were well chosen. I was a bit disappointed that the cut a fair bit out, the movie wasn't long and they could have easily added más in without it getting tedious, I was also disappointed with the ending as they didn't finished it in the same place as the libros as i would have liked to have seen. All though i do think the movie was quite good for and adaptation of a book and did very well, but thats just my opinion.
This spot was created to celebrate book-to-tv/film-screen adaptations. True, there is no way that a live version will ever live up to our imagination. And yes, there are hundreds of examples of how this formula can go wrong. But there are also hundreds of examples of how the formula can go right and astonish us with the magic of cinema, yet all too often these examples are forgotten -- and so this spot is to remind ourselves of both the good and the bad, and to discuss either.

A common criticism of book-to-screen adaptations nowadays is that filmmakers are seemingly relying too often on literature...
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1. Gulliver's Travels from 1939 made por the Max Fleischer studio. Based on the novel por Jonathan Swift, this film is my parte superior, arriba favorito! out of the two films the Fleischer brothers had ever made


2. Bambi from 1942 made por the Walt disney Studio and based on the book por Felix Salten. Now I had wanted to read the original book the movie is based on, so I'd ordered it online.


3. Cinderella. I know fairy-tales are part of literature and Charles Perrault's story of Cinderella is one of my favorito! fairy-tales; it's another favorito! literary film from Disney


4. Alice in Wonderland from...
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