What Makes A Novelization Different From An Adaption?

By Claire Morrison


Movies based on books seem to be all the rage in recent years. A greater number of movies from books have been coming to theaters and attracting existing readers of the book the film is based on. These films are often known as adaptions (sometimes referred to as movies based on books).

Yet another type of books that are movies (more accurately called books from movies) is a novelization, which is in essence the opposite of a film adaption. A book is created after the script is written and thus the script is "novelized" for another group of fans.

Typically what transpires is a producer will hire a writer to compose a script for a movie. After the movie script is done, or often while the screenplay is still getting written, the producer could utilize an author to write a novelization of the movie script. The purpose of doing this is normally for promoting and broadening the niche for the story to a broader reach of potentially interested enthusiasts.

The downside with novelizations would be that often times it's tough to change over a story that was primarily a script to a book. In a movie we never get that much inner discussion (or none at all), and also the representations of places and characters aren't as vibrant. If the author of the story did not initially visualize the tale, it is frequently complicated to change the script to a book and remember to keep the story complete, not choppy, and most importantly enjoyable.

So we have books as movies and we've got books from films. Yet which one is preferable? It's a hard argument. Almost always however the initial format the project was created in will be more enjoyable than the adaptation.

Which means that if the novel was created initially then a film influenced by the novel was put together, almost always the novel will be better. In contrast if the script was crafted first and foremost, then a book was drafted from the movie, the film could turn out more enjoyable. There are, of course times that this isn't how it happens, but in general that is how it turns out.

In combination with adaptions & novelizations, there's tie-in versions as well. Such editions generally consist of the identical text that the initial book had, yet the cover photos are updated to match the movie adaption and "tie-in" the novel to its film.

Whether books as movies were initially written by an author or a screenwriter, ultimately the process is about changing a tale to a new style with the hope of reaching different masses who'll savor the initial story in any format that they enjoy.




About the Author:



0 comments:

Post a Comment