I am concerned with the obsession of "faithfulness" when it comes to adaptations, especially video game adaptations.
This is mostly coming from The Witcher and The Last of Us. Yes, I know Netfilix' the WItcher is an adaptation of the books not the games but this whole vibe I'm worried about is coming from the same type of place.
I haven't seen The Last of Us yet- I will check it out probably tonight. But the reviews are positive- which is cool- but a lot of it seems to be because it's "faithful to the game."
So- ok, I don't think good art and entertainment are going to come from meeting audience expectations. This idea where you have a "community" of eager consumers who have a checklist of things they need delivered on, and then its met or not and then you can decide, yep, it passes or it doesn't- that is so incredibly dull and lame and why do people want to live this way.
It's like "his show/movie will be good IF..." blah blah blah. Don't folks want to be surprised, delighted, inspired? When I think about my favorite stuff it's all because I didn't know such a thing could exist. Breaking Bad, Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, Severance, even Game of Thrones at first- I did not want these things, I imagined they'd be crap when I first heard the premise, and they were the greatest TV shows of the past 20 years.
And now we have things like the The Last of Us where it feels like we're holding it up to the game and checking off it's the same and deciding if that's good or not. And that means that the show will never be great, no matter how good it is, because by its very nature it can't truly bring something new.
My worry is, with companies playing it so safe, this sort of thing will squelch interesting shows and movies. We already see Netflix canceling everything left and right, and film studios not making money on anything that isn't some franchise. I already feel like film as an interesting creative art form has effectively died, and now this "faithfulness" doctrine is coming to help kill off TV. It is just going to add fuel to the fires of the greater causes, chiefly media conglomeration. But's just a bit disturbing to see all this "true to the source material" rhetoric dominating these "franchises."