Just some random musing... but this is something that has been puzzling me recently.
You see, I can understand why authors and IP owners wants their property to become movies. Unless it bombs, they will usually make money out of it. Not only that, but it will usually expose your property to a much greater amount of people and will not only make it more profitable, but will often make your name recognizable and thus allow you to start new projects. It's all around good.
I also understand why studios want you to think that movies are the ultimate form of art and entertainment... after all, it is in their best interest for the masses to think so.
What I don't understand is the fan's reaction to it.
Let's face it... most movies adaptation aren't all that great. And even when they are (Most recent Marvel movies, Harry Potter, Lord of the Ring, etc) they still aren't as good as the original work. Geek culture has been spoiled lately, as Comic Book and Geek-Friendly Novel adaptation have been coming out in throng and have been mostly successful... but it wasn't always so and every time a new one is made, there's always a risk that instead of glorifying the subject matter, it will tarnish it (Green Lantern anyone?).
What more, in many case, we are actually paying to be told a story we already know... I mean, if you've read the Lord of the Ring/Harry Potter novels, you pretty much knew exactly what was going on in there, no big surprise or anything.
Yet that doesn't stop most fan to go 'OMG! THERE'S GOING TO BE A HOBBIT MOVIE!' (I'm just taking this one as example... movie bob has been raving about the Avengers for months now for example)...
When you think about it from a purely objective point of view, movies are pretty expensive form of entertainment (From a Time:Cost ratio, compared to book, games, etc) and are just not as engrossing or captivating as the original format.
Why is it that we're not only willing to pay for a story we already know, but are excited about it?
Why is it that when deep, rich and lushly detailed fictional world are crammed into a 2 hours animated/live action package that usually misses all the subtlety and depth of the setting, we throw our money at it instead of being wary?
Have we been conditioned to associating the making of a movie we like as a validation that what we like is good?
You see, I can understand why authors and IP owners wants their property to become movies. Unless it bombs, they will usually make money out of it. Not only that, but it will usually expose your property to a much greater amount of people and will not only make it more profitable, but will often make your name recognizable and thus allow you to start new projects. It's all around good.
I also understand why studios want you to think that movies are the ultimate form of art and entertainment... after all, it is in their best interest for the masses to think so.
What I don't understand is the fan's reaction to it.
Let's face it... most movies adaptation aren't all that great. And even when they are (Most recent Marvel movies, Harry Potter, Lord of the Ring, etc) they still aren't as good as the original work. Geek culture has been spoiled lately, as Comic Book and Geek-Friendly Novel adaptation have been coming out in throng and have been mostly successful... but it wasn't always so and every time a new one is made, there's always a risk that instead of glorifying the subject matter, it will tarnish it (Green Lantern anyone?).
What more, in many case, we are actually paying to be told a story we already know... I mean, if you've read the Lord of the Ring/Harry Potter novels, you pretty much knew exactly what was going on in there, no big surprise or anything.
Yet that doesn't stop most fan to go 'OMG! THERE'S GOING TO BE A HOBBIT MOVIE!' (I'm just taking this one as example... movie bob has been raving about the Avengers for months now for example)...
When you think about it from a purely objective point of view, movies are pretty expensive form of entertainment (From a Time:Cost ratio, compared to book, games, etc) and are just not as engrossing or captivating as the original format.
Why is it that we're not only willing to pay for a story we already know, but are excited about it?
Why is it that when deep, rich and lushly detailed fictional world are crammed into a 2 hours animated/live action package that usually misses all the subtlety and depth of the setting, we throw our money at it instead of being wary?
Have we been conditioned to associating the making of a movie we like as a validation that what we like is good?