Top 10 Most Unforgivable Book to Movie Changes

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  • Опубликовано: 5 окт 2022
  • These changes from books to movie are beyond unforgivable. For this list, we’ll be looking at book adaptations that made some terrible choices when bringing our favorites to the big screen. Watch out for spoilers from the outset. Our countdown includes "The Shining," "Harry Potter," "The Hobbit," and more! Which change did YOU find the most unforgivable? Let us know in the comments!
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    13 Reasons Why: Top 10 Differences Between the Book and the Show (MATURE) - • 13 Reasons Why: Top 10...
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    #Adaptation #Books #Unforgivable #Changes #TheLordOfTheRings
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Комментарии • 876

  • @MsMojo
    @MsMojo  Год назад +36

    Which change did YOU find the most unforgivable? Let us know below, and be sure to check out our video of the Top 20 Book to TV Show Adaptations of the Century So Far - ruclips.net/video/a3oRouNPnZY/видео.html

    • @Codmaniac91
      @Codmaniac91 Год назад +2

      You forgot about the movie Hostage with Bruce Willis. Which happens to be based on the the novel by Michael Crais. They changed 3 things. 1. They cut out the trailer scene of which Talley finds a bunch of cereal boxes and one of car thieves' mom's head in a jar in their fridge. 2. The chief was corrupt by the mob. 3. The whole ending of the book was changed for the movie.

    • @sessionshannah
      @sessionshannah Год назад

      Agreed

    • @forrestdupre87
      @forrestdupre87 Год назад

      Peter Pan

    • @seria8253
      @seria8253 Год назад +4

      the entire percy jackson and eragon movies

    • @fluffychan6000
      @fluffychan6000 Год назад

      WORLD WAR Z. it should have been a feauxcumentary.

  • @dhruvgeorge
    @dhruvgeorge Год назад +524

    Could have also mentioned almost all of Ron Weasley's best moments being given to Hermione and reducing him to just comic relief

    • @andreca90
      @andreca90 Год назад +7

      Agreed!

    • @johnspetkitty81
      @johnspetkitty81 Год назад +4

      And SO MUCH more

    • @louff4tw746
      @louff4tw746 Год назад +2

      What good moments? 😂 abandoning Harry And Hermione? - someone who read the books several times

    • @toboringo
      @toboringo Год назад +31

      @@louff4tw746 then you’ll know that in the books Ron stood up against Sirius (on a broken ankle) and not Hermione in PoA. Ron also continuously defend Hermione and Harry against Professor Snape, Ron was freaking out a lot more when Hermione was tortured by Bellatrix. In the books Ron was continuously the loyal friend through and through.

    • @toboringo
      @toboringo Год назад +19

      Also Ron suggested to save the elves during the war

  • @rwwilson21
    @rwwilson21 Год назад +561

    What the Harry Potter movies did with Ginny really upset me. She became one of my favorite characters while reading the books. esp. while reading book 6.

    • @91clarie
      @91clarie Год назад +60

      She was so fierce and witty in the books and her relationship with Harry was developed beautifully. Whereas in the films, she literally had no personality at all and I have heard from people who have only watched the films that they thought the Harry/Ginny pairing was weird af, which it WAS in the films! But in the books it all made sense!

    • @Crow29803
      @Crow29803 Год назад +18

      @@91clarie when people tell me that Harry and Ginny shouldn’t be a thing, I ask, “did you read the books?” And of course they lie. I can always tell because of that statement, “Harry and Hermione should have been together. Ginny makes no sense.”

    • @DaniqueEmiliaSteinfeld
      @DaniqueEmiliaSteinfeld Год назад +1

      What does eps mean?

    • @rwwilson21
      @rwwilson21 Год назад +2

      @@DaniqueEmiliaSteinfeld typo on my part, it should have went esp.(i'll fix it) but it's short handed for especially.

    • @Raven0526
      @Raven0526 Год назад +12

      @Sarah Granger I agree. Ron is my absolute favorite and I loved his and Hermione's chemistry in the books. They totally ruined his character in the movies. They gave all of Ron's best lines in the books to either Harry or Hermione. It annoyed me so much.

  • @thegiraffeman
    @thegiraffeman Год назад +514

    For me the most unforgivable changes were both Percy Jackson movies. Glad to be getting a remake on Disney+.

    • @TenohHikari
      @TenohHikari Год назад +15

      Agreed, I love those books and have read all of them. The movies made me so mad

    • @PlagueDoctor447
      @PlagueDoctor447 Год назад +6

      About the remake. I'm not really looking forward to it since I found out what characters will be there. Even though I love Percy Jackson, I won't Be watching a Disney remake+

    • @TenohHikari
      @TenohHikari Год назад +1

      @@PlagueDoctor447 I’ll give it an episode or two to prove itself

    • @gilbertmillers4865
      @gilbertmillers4865 Год назад +4

      I agree with you but because they are on Disney+ they’re not exactly gonna be any more book accurate than the movies were

    • @TenohHikari
      @TenohHikari Год назад +2

      @@gilbertmillers4865 one can dream

  • @Whats_The_Point23
    @Whats_The_Point23 Год назад +186

    The Ginny character changes aside, the end of Deathly Hallows part II actually made me angry. Spoiler Alert: It took the whole point of the the last two books, including Dumbledore’s death and threw them out the window. Voldemort should never have been able to have the final battle with Harry. The Elder Wand recognized Harry as its true owner and didn’t work against him at all. There was no tying up of their magic like at the end of book four. It was drawn out for drama and action that didn’t occur in the book. The whole point in Dumbledore having Snape kill him was so Voldemort wouldn’t kill Draco for the wand’s loyalty. Draco disarming him gave Draco the Elder Wand’s loyalty which then transferred to Harry when he disarmed Draco. The Elder Wand would not have worked against Harry!

    • @MoonTsubasaHime
      @MoonTsubasaHime Год назад +17

      Omg then Harry just snapped the Elder Wand and threw it away like it was nothing!

    • @ceresininay248
      @ceresininay248 Год назад +26

      I totally agree. Plus, the way of his death is not the same, in the book Voldemort dies like any human being and not dissolving in the air. And that is the message, for all his quest for immortality and power, Voldemort died like any other wizard.

    • @takatamiyagawa5688
      @takatamiyagawa5688 Год назад +8

      @@MoonTsubasaHime I prefer Harry snapping the elder wand in half. It ends the wand's bloody line of provenance. It differentiates him from Dumbledore, who might have been too curious to destroy such a significant artifact.

    • @melodramatic7904
      @melodramatic7904 Год назад +16

      @@takatamiyagawa5688 I also preferred him snapping the wand but I hate that they didn't include him fixing his original wand first.

    • @HWR_-eb5fm
      @HWR_-eb5fm Год назад +6

      @@melodramatic7904 Totally agree. I’m fine with how they extended the final battle in the movie, though I do wish they had included more of Harry and Voldemort’s conversation. But Harry just snapping the Elder Wand without fixing his own first still bugs me 11 years later.

  • @daniellewis2133
    @daniellewis2133 Год назад +99

    Conceiving a child to be used for spare body parts for a dying child is royally fucked up.

    • @freya8133
      @freya8133 Год назад +3

      People do it though.

    • @hollyo7301
      @hollyo7301 Год назад +10

      Precisely. As is that poor kid getting in a mortal accident less than an hour after winning a court case that gave her the right to make her own medical decisions

    • @jackilynpyzocha662
      @jackilynpyzocha662 2 месяца назад +1

      Why did the doctor go along with it(if he did)?

    • @senbonogyaku
      @senbonogyaku Месяц назад

      ​@@jackilynpyzocha662parents have the right to make all medical decisions for minors, if a parent says "use my kid to save my other kid" they will.

  • @omegatired
    @omegatired Год назад +357

    Charlie and Grandpa figured out how to rescue themselves ... and Charlie still turned the candy back over to Mr. Wonka. I think the fizzy drink scene is more "Charlie isn't perfect", but he is bright and he is kind ... and he was willing to lose everything when he gave the candy back, knowing he'd broken a rule. So, for me, not such an unforgivable change.

    • @themayhemofmadness7038
      @themayhemofmadness7038 Год назад +33

      I agree with you on how they turned it to proof that he was a good kid.
      Though, I still find it ironic that the movie that focused mostly on Charlie was called “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory”, while the one that focused more on Willy Wonka was called “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.”
      And poor Rold Dahl just had such crap luck with movie adaptations of his novels not living up to his vision. He hated the change to the end of The Witches as well and disowned that movie for it.

    • @LB-gz3ke
      @LB-gz3ke Год назад +20

      I was thinking the same thing. He gave that candy back and his family truly needed the money "Slugworth" was going to pay for it. I think we are to assume the others ran straight to Slugworth with the Gobstopper even though they were much better off financially. So, he was redeemed by being the only one who was not going to betray Wonka. The most disappointing part for me as a kid was, they did not show the other characters leaving the factory. This is described in the book. We see that they 1) all survived and 2) ALL got the chocolate.

    • @hunterolaughlin
      @hunterolaughlin Год назад +14

      @@themayhemofmadness7038 I don’t blame Dahl for hating the ending of The Witches (1990). After watching the 2020 version with the book’s ending and hearing about the changes ending in the 1990 film, I’d also be mad too.

    • @melissacooper8724
      @melissacooper8724 Год назад +12

      @@LB-gz3ke In the 2005 remake we get to see the other children leave the factory. I hated in the 1971 version that all we got was Mr. Wonka's promise to Charlie that the other kids would be fine.

    • @leslienope
      @leslienope Год назад +13

      Also Charlie was just curious, whereas the other kids were greedy and demanding about the things they took/tried to take.

  • @CrystalGoddess90
    @CrystalGoddess90 Год назад +164

    I can forgive many changes, but there's one that I will never forgive or get over:
    DID YA PUT YOUR NAME IN THE GOBLET OF FIYRE?! Dumbledore asked calmly.

    • @Laramaria2
      @Laramaria2 Год назад +8

      That was the weirdest change ever... Dumbledore being calm is what makes his rare screaming moments so intimidating...

    • @andreca90
      @andreca90 Год назад +8

      LOL yes... that's top of my list of "Dumbest HP book to movie changes" and close next is the fact that Lily's eyes in the final movie don't match Harry's.... like... how do you ruin that?

    • @gabygaby5701
      @gabygaby5701 Год назад

      Same

    • @janeldavis905
      @janeldavis905 Год назад +5

      @@andreca90 OMG I'm so glad to see someone else annoyed by the eyes thing. Seriously, there was ONE casting requirement for young Lily: she had to have Daniel Radcliffe's eyes. That's it. That was their only assignment 🤣

    • @lillynichols9884
      @lillynichols9884 Год назад +2

      That was absolutely bizarre. I know Michael Gambon can act, I have liked him in several roles, but he was a terrible Dumbledore.

  • @spencersmith6536
    @spencersmith6536 Год назад +164

    How is ERAGON not mentioned? How is that not number ONE? They changed literally everything in that movie pretty much.

    • @GummiballIndustry
      @GummiballIndustry Год назад +2

      I was thinking the exact same thing! :D

    • @PlayfulFruitLPer
      @PlayfulFruitLPer Год назад +5

      Eragon had some cool concepts, especially the way magic worked… but aside from that, the series is pretty bad. It makes sense the movie was worse. It’s really not a good series.

    • @toddhanzlik1516
      @toddhanzlik1516 Год назад +2

      Yeah, almost a third of the book's content is just missing, and the final battle was under the dwarves' mountain, not in the enchanted forest.

    • @CJ-vw3dt
      @CJ-vw3dt Год назад

      I think it is not mentioned because the film was a total failure, and rightfully so.

    • @ChibiProwl
      @ChibiProwl Год назад

      Hence why I watched that movie once🤬They murdered that book!🤬

  • @just.thalin
    @just.thalin Год назад +26

    I think the movie ending of My sister´s keeper is better. It's more realistic. The whole idea of ​​having a baby just for "spare parts" is wrong and Kate was already too sick to heal like that and live a long life while her sister fought for hers and eventually died.I was a bit upset when I read the book and it ended like this. It didn't feel right. Even so, she helped her sister a lot when she was alive.

    • @redrasegarden
      @redrasegarden 28 дней назад +1

      Do people really hate it? You’d think they’d be happy that the main character lived

    • @islasullivan3463
      @islasullivan3463 21 день назад

      ^ Their arguments usually are that the darker ending was better fitting for the story, when Kate choosing to die is also a pretty dark ending. And just bc an ending is darker doesn’t mean it’s better.

    • @redrasegarden
      @redrasegarden 21 день назад +2

      @@islasullivan3463 I’ve heard this argument. It has to be executed perfectly to work

    • @islasullivan3463
      @islasullivan3463 21 день назад

      @redrasegarden Agreed. One series that I think pulls it off is A Series of Unfortunate Events, bc the main theme of is that terrible can happen or be done to people, and that it can all depend on circumstances and luck (for lack of better terms), and the narrator says right at the beginning that this won’t have a happy ending.
      My Sisters Keeper’s message is that one child should not be used as spare parts for another, as that is horrific, then ends with that child’s body being used as spare parts for another.

  • @joyunicycle
    @joyunicycle Год назад +134

    Forgot these:
    *Ella Enchanted* - lifting the curse
    *The Giver* - shoehorned love interest/making Asher uninteresting
    *Percy Jackson* - aging up the characters
    *Voyage of the Dawn Treader* - adding green smoke subplot
    *Artemis Fowl* - too many plots

    • @Sate12
      @Sate12 Год назад +11

      I kind of forgive Dawn treader because they were trying to add a narrative. They didn't think "Let's explore these islands while searching for these 7 lords" was a strong enough motivation. They also needed to pull the witch back in (no idea why) and to add a real Climax with STAKES

    • @yiwoon_cr8s
      @yiwoon_cr8s Год назад +3

      ok but Percy Jackson aging up the characters didn't change anything at all

    • @Sate12
      @Sate12 Год назад +19

      @@yiwoon_cr8s it kind of does. Especially given the prophecy of the second one. If they were intending to follow the entire series, they shot themselves in the foot. Plus all the other changes they made that were notably abhorrent.

    • @jessiem3169
      @jessiem3169 Год назад +17

      I just tell myself the Ella's Enchanted movie is a different story, just with the same curse and characters. The movie by itself is fun but it was my favorite book as a kid, so I was disappointed the first time I saw it because the story is so different.

    • @kailyns8159
      @kailyns8159 Год назад +22

      @@jessiem3169 Ugh... Ella Enchanted the movie was such a massive disappointment.
      It’s really not the same curse at all though. The book makes it clear that the curse causes Ella pain when she doesn’t obey immediately. Her learning what level of pain she can tolerate before she has to obey is a huge part of her character arc. It helps her figure out her loopholes, her limitations, and is instrumental in developing her determination to break her curse. The book curse also doesn’t give Ella skills she doesn’t actually have in order to obey a command-movie karate scene I’m looking at you. Or make her freeze in mid-air! Because that’s not realistic. And one thing Gail Carson Levine’s story got perfect was keeping the curse realistically grounded despite the story being a fantasy.
      The movie is a cute Shrek wanna-be. But it is not Ella Enchanted. They stripped everything unique and surprising from Levine’s book, including how it’s a literal Cinderella story, and gave us a damsel in distress devoid of a personality who only fights back when commanded to do so, until the very end after she has broken the curse. And the way the movie breaks the curse is just trash. She looks in a mirror and commands herself not to be obedient? Seriously? The whole point of her character arc is that she learns that she has been wanting to break her curse for a selfish reason, when what actually breaks it is her selfless choice to save Char and her kingdom by refusing to marry him and become queen. She can’t risk that her curse could be used to harm him or hurt the kingdom. The movie missed the entire point of Ella’s character arc.
      And I can’t stand what they did to Char either. He wasn’t a stupid, disinterested teen who fell for Ella because she’s pretty and supposedly not interested in him. Book Char was deeply interested in his kingdom and he fell for Ella because she made him laugh and she was a smart, interesting, uniquely skilled, independent woman.
      The book deserves a new adaption from people who actually understand it and want to highlight its uniqueness.

  • @Helga947
    @Helga947 Год назад +39

    I am happy about the change in my sister's keeper. In my opinion Anna dying so unexpectedly is just comes of as shock effect what many writers do when they write in an unexpected death of a main character.

    • @crystalpritchard5065
      @crystalpritchard5065 Год назад +3

      I mean it’s shocking, but it’s not done for shock value. In an ideal world Anna doesn’t exist because Kate didn’t get cancer, so it’s very poetic that, in the end, Anna dying and saving Kate one last time gives the parents the two kids they were always meant to have. It’s a beautifully tragic ending that is completely destroyed in the movie.

    • @iamsherlocked7448
      @iamsherlocked7448 2 месяца назад +2

      @@crystalpritchard5065 Not really I think it's handled better here because in the book the mom actually cares about Anna but in the movie she doesn't at all and even when everyone around her tells her she's taking things too far even Kate I get that life unpredictable and shit happens but Anna didn't deserve to die and Kate didn't get her wish so no one wins except the mom that way

  • @Jill_of_trades
    @Jill_of_trades Год назад +29

    I liked the movie ending; siblings shouldn't be forced to be experiments (where they are made purely to harvest organs out of). I think it sent a way more unusual, intense message about life - everyone knowing life can be fragile/unpredictable anyway

  • @CJ-vw3dt
    @CJ-vw3dt Год назад +49

    Harry Potter movies have another unforgivable changes: Grindelwald. In the books he rathet dies then telling Voldemort that Dumbledore has the elder wand. Considering their connections that's a huge difference, and a redeemtion arc.

  • @trinaq
    @trinaq Год назад +368

    Even though the ending of the novel of "My Sister's Keeper" was controversial, it still delivered a crushing blow on the fragility of life, and how things don't always work out the way you expect them to. I'm with Jodi on this stance, although Kate's death was more expected, it takes away from the book's message.

    • @natasha8966
      @natasha8966 Год назад +25

      Exactly I remember reading it after the movie I was so surprised but I thought it was a better ending then the movie.

    • @HUeducator2011
      @HUeducator2011 Год назад +20

      The book was so much better. The movie robbed people smh

    • @malloryweeks3306
      @malloryweeks3306 Год назад +7

      @@HUeducator2011 I agree. I like the book better.

    • @FreckledPapaya
      @FreckledPapaya Год назад +8

      same the book tied itself together and the movie just sacrificed so much and for what?

    • @briannastultz6924
      @briannastultz6924 Год назад +12

      The book was amazing. I hated the movie!

  • @melissacooper8724
    @melissacooper8724 Год назад +64

    In Half-Blood Prince they omitted lot of the flashback scenes that tell Voldermort's backstory. In the book we get to see Voldermort's family like his grandfather, uncle, and mother. And we also learn how Merope bewitched Tom Senior into falling in love with her thus Tom Riddle Jr aka Voldermort was born. The movie shows none of that. The film only shows when Dumbledore shows up at the orphanage to tell Tom he is a wizard.

    • @superhippie2000
      @superhippie2000 Год назад +2

      Ya that annoyed me too. The book pretty much explained Voldermorts entire backstory. One of the movies does mention like hes a half blood or whatever but half blood prince explains the entire thing and why he is the way he is. It also bothered me that the book and movie were called half blood prince since it really had no plot point other than being snapes book and the reveal at the end about Snape even tho the majority of the book was about Harry trying to get Memories of Voldermorts past to figure out where he hid the items.

    • @grahamdamberger7130
      @grahamdamberger7130 Год назад

      They threw those out the window in favour of whatever was going on with Ron, Hermione, Cormag and Lavender as well as Ginny and Dean's on again-off again relationship just for Ginny to be with Harry, but the romantic scenes between the two were awful. Don't know if Bonnie was just uncomfortable with romantic scenes in general, or if the tension wasn't how it needed to be, but either way, I can see why Ginny's novel counterpart is loved more by fans.

    • @melissacooper8724
      @melissacooper8724 Год назад +1

      @@grahamdamberger7130 I don't know why they thought the romantic teenage drama was more important than Voldermort's backstory. At that scene where Hermione said that she wanted to throw up at Lavender calling Ron her "Won-won" I wanted to join her!

  • @jocelyntrishell
    @jocelyntrishell Год назад +56

    I’ll always be upset that Faramir tries to take the ring in the movie, he is such a great character in the book and portrayed as wise and guesses the value of Frodo’s quest

    • @brontewcat
      @brontewcat Год назад

      I totally agree. Faramir was the ‘good’ brother. I did not like what Peter Jackson did.

    • @adak.8748
      @adak.8748 Год назад +9

      Unpopular opinion: I prefer Faramir from the films, I totally see how changing his behaviour made sense - he was also tempted like Boromir at first, but on the contrary to his brother, he managed to overcome the temptation and let Frodo go. IMO it makes his character more interesting and human, because it shows that he is not perfect, too.

    • @taraevans1108
      @taraevans1108 Год назад +2

      In the film commentary, they discussed this. They had built up the fact that the ring moved people to do things beyond their control and made everyone want it. To then have a character that just said, "meh, no thanks" THEY felt negated the ring's power.

    • @brontewcat
      @brontewcat Год назад +1

      @@taraevans1108 Yet that is exactly why Faramir was such a good man. It is the exceptions that make the rule stronger

    • @taraevans1108
      @taraevans1108 Год назад

      @@brontewcat I understand. Was just letting them know how the director and writers justified it.

  • @lauramiller6106
    @lauramiller6106 Год назад +38

    I'd like to add The Bourne Identity. In the book his love interest is an renowned economist. He saves her from being raped, which is how she knows she can trust him, so she is willing to risk everything to help him. Also, without her finance knowledge Bourne would never have succeeded/survived. In the movie she is a nomad with no money, no job, no future. She loses nothing by associating with Bourne (okay she is frequently in danger). She also does almost nothing to help him save for one scene where she flirts with a man to gain information. It was a terrible degradation of an interesting character.

    • @murgontreloar5254
      @murgontreloar5254 Год назад +6

      And then they kill her off in the opening of the sequel. Suuuuuuucked. I know they had to change the plot to make it a contemporary thriller but that was no reason to shortchange Marie like that.

  • @nancyjay790
    @nancyjay790 Год назад +42

    The debacle with The Hobbit trilogy was largely due to studio interference. The studio head wanted another LOTR, and pushed for extra films and action scenes.

    • @leviticuspagelus
      @leviticuspagelus Год назад +5

      Plus Peter Jackson wasn't supposed to direct the films. Guillermo Del Toro was to direct The Hobbit but for whatever reason had to leave so Jackson was forced to step back in. Jackson was burnt-out from filming LoTR and that is why The Hobbit was CGI heavy.

    • @rosemarieboulton1971
      @rosemarieboulton1971 Год назад +7

      Yes! I feel bad that Peter Jackson gets so much flack for The Hobbit movies but he came into the process very late and so much had already been decided and, like you said, the studio had their ideas on what the movies should be which is probably part of the reason the original director decided to leave the project.

    • @BattyMadie
      @BattyMadie Год назад +3

      I came here for this comment. It wasn't that he "Couldn't help himself" He was doing his best to create enough content for three movies when I think he wanted to only do two.

  • @AMStryx
    @AMStryx Год назад +20

    Personally, I believe the most unforgivable thing they changed in My Sister's Keeper was eliminating the lawyer's ex-GF from the story. I've seen the movie and read the book, and while I can understand both arguments about each ending I personally favor the movie ending. I felt is was bittersweet compared to the book ending that just felt bitter. In the movie ending Kate got the peaceful death she wanted that set her free from the suffering and burden of her cancer that was consuming her whole family with it. In the book, Kate is left feeling responsible for Anna's death since she made Anna do the court stuff and so is obligated to live her life burdened with that guilt(instead of the cancer) so that Anna's death won't be for nothing(having to live life for the both of them in a sense). In the book, Kate already felt as though she was robbing Anna of the chance to live her life as she pleased, and by the end she's left feeling that's she's literally robbed Anna of her life entirely. So in a sense, the book ending basically feels like life/karma is punishing Kate for selfishly making Anna fight(when she didn't totally want to) so Kate could die, and instead Kate lives by receiving Anna's kidney anyway as a result of losing Anna. In other words, Kate gained a new life at the expense of her sister's life. To compare the burden of cancer to the burden of knowing your choices likely make it at least partially your fault for someone's death, I personally feel that cancer is the "lesser of 2 evils" so to speak. That's why I personally favor the movie ending, 'cause the book ending just seems cruel to me.

    • @NsTheName
      @NsTheName 3 месяца назад +4

      As someone who is currently battling stage lV breast cancer, I completely agree. I would much rather die from my cancer than feel responsible for the rest of my life for someone else’s death. I’m not afraid to die because I know there’s more after this earth experience. It would be torture to have to live my life feeling responsible for someone else’s death.

    • @ItsKadelyn
      @ItsKadelyn Месяц назад

      I hope you are okay now🫂🫶❤️​@@NsTheName

  • @crasicatlady
    @crasicatlady Год назад +211

    Regarding "My Sister's Keeper" I felt like another point was "will" vs "obligation". Once Anna wins her case, her lawyer believes she'll still donate her kidney. She wanted her voice heard, not kill her sister. So by changing the ending they are also making her character selfish.

    • @PlayfulFruitLPer
      @PlayfulFruitLPer Год назад +65

      Except Anna wanted to donate. Kate asked her to do the trial because she knew she wouldn’t survive the operation and was ready to die.

    • @lochuynh5387
      @lochuynh5387 Год назад +60

      In the book's ending, Anna died, didn't she? So if that's her being selfless, it's counter-productive in my opinion. It sent a message that in life, you are either being selfish and live or selfless and die.
      Anna is 11 year old, she deserves to live. I have just recently watched an episode about child marriage and it made me sympathize with her even more.
      Anna's lawyer asked Sara a valid question: She protected Kate but who protected Anna?
      Anna'd donated since the moment she was born. Why should the kidney donating define her?

    • @crasicatlady
      @crasicatlady Год назад +28

      @@lochuynh5387 My point was that Anna took her family to trial, but in the end she was still feeling conflicted about donating the kidney.
      Now she had all the power to do it (no one was forcing her), she was considering it. I believe that it made her character even more complex. The movie took the easy way out, not allowing her character to develop even further.
      Anna's death is absolutely tragic. I cried so hard. And then her sister gets the kidney, has a miraculous recovery and lives with guilt feelings. I love the book, tragedy and all because it made it unique.

    • @malloryweeks3306
      @malloryweeks3306 Год назад +12

      @@lochuynh5387 I agree. Except in the book she is thirteen. I like the book a lot more than the movie. Anna felt obligated to give her kidney without being asked if she wanted to. There was a small part of her that wanted to say no and just wanted that option. Kate knew that she just wanted to be a kid and be able to try out for hockey and have kids and just live a normal life without having to be a donor her whole life. All the characters in the book seemed so much more interesting than in the movie too

    • @lochuynh5387
      @lochuynh5387 Год назад +20

      @@crasicatlady I think making Anna a tragic hero definitely left a strong impression. It also puts all the attention on her.
      While I agree that attention is a good thing, it also leaves a negative impact when it's monopolized. As you can see, we have been only talking about Anna as if her character makes or breaks the story.
      In the movie, Kate felt as much an essential character as Anna to me. She didn't ignore what's going on with her family just because she's sick. She said the disease was not only killing her but also killing her family: Jesse's dyslexic was neglected, Brian was feeling less and less like Sara's husband while Sara used all her time to take care of Kate, even Sara's sister only worked part-time job and used the remaining time to help her.
      That's why she made Anna fought that case and it made her more than a patient to me. What we often don't notice is that being a burden kills people as much as their disease.
      I love a tragic story as much as the next person but wholesomeness, resolution and positive message are important to me too. I rather seeing the family learn to deal with grief, heel and continue to live their lives than leaving them stuck between grief, guilt and resentment forever.

  • @AM-lp5ux
    @AM-lp5ux Год назад +48

    I watched My Sister's Keeper long before the book ended up on my Kindle. When I read the book, I was crushed a second time, and angry. All of a sudden it felt that they needed to have a, for lack of a better way of putting it, "feel good" ending. Anna gets to live her life, Kate was going to die no matter what, etc. Upon reading the book, the ending was SOO much more powerful and devastating, that it really tainted the movie for me. I am glad you had it at number 1.

  • @katymvt
    @katymvt Год назад +17

    I actually like the ending to My Sister's Keeper movie better. I liked them both. But, I thought it ended up being kind of cool that we got to explore both possibilities.

  • @UmbraKrameri
    @UmbraKrameri Год назад +33

    Honestly, I liked the movie ending of My Sister's Keeper better. The book ending kind of made the whole ethical debate and Anna's will meaningless in the final outcome, while the movie honored both her and Kate's right to have the final say over what happens to their bodies. For me, it was much more meaningful than the random car crash that magically resolved everything. Jodi is kind of the M. Night Shyamalan of cheap nonsensical last minute twists and sometimes it works for me better, but here it really missed the mark.

    • @hollyo7301
      @hollyo7301 Год назад

      I didn’t read the book yet.

  • @sadem1045
    @sadem1045 Год назад +12

    I'm happy they changed the ending for My Sister's Keeper. Jodie Picoult's twist endings are very important to her stories and I appreciated that the creators of the film decided to keep the book's ending a surprise.

    • @lstarsabb
      @lstarsabb Год назад +5

      Same I felt for Kate, but I'm not upset with Anna getting to live her life. Kate's life was important but so was Anna.

  • @davidpumpkinsjr.5108
    @davidpumpkinsjr.5108 Год назад +24

    It should be pointed out that stealing the Fizzy Lifting Drinks was Grandpa Joe's idea, Charlie just went along with it.
    When Harry Potter is inevitably remade as a seven-season long television or streaming epic, they'll have time to properly flesh out Ginny's character.

    • @andreca90
      @andreca90 Год назад +3

      praying for that day to come... and they can fix Ron as well... haha :)

  • @CMCGDavis
    @CMCGDavis Год назад +9

    Maybe because I saw the movie before reading the book that I like the movie ending better.
    I was pissed that the little sister died anyway and was essentially used as a means to keep her sister alive in the end.
    I can understand life is unpredictable and precious with the movie’s ending as well. Considering the mother really only had been focusing on her oldest daughter and never considered her younger.

  • @cocoanutt27
    @cocoanutt27 Год назад +32

    I'm surprised there weren't any "dishonorable" mentions like Eragon, Percy Jackson, Twilight, and World War Z.

    • @kennethpowers82982
      @kennethpowers82982 Год назад +1

      And Stephen king’s misery also

    • @AliciaNash2013
      @AliciaNash2013 Год назад

      Twilight books were way more amazing than the movies led on. But that's the only book series I read front to back.

    • @kristentaylor5359
      @kristentaylor5359 12 дней назад

      the World War Z book was unfilmable as is, so it just provided a basis for the movie. I enjoyed both for what they were

    • @cocoanutt27
      @cocoanutt27 12 дней назад

      @@kristentaylor5359 The only thing the movie took from the book was the title. World War Z, the book, is a thought-provoking piece that highlights different groups of people through the use of interviews after a zombie apocalypse has occurred. What part of that sounds unfilmable? A film student with little to no budget could have made a more faithful adaptation than Hollywood did.

    • @kristentaylor5359
      @kristentaylor5359 12 дней назад

      @@cocoanutt27 It would be a difficult story to film, it jumps all over the place and doesn't have a central character. Also, it takes the main theme of the book, not just the name

  • @ajanija1590
    @ajanija1590 Год назад +54

    I agree with Faramir, he was/is my favourite character in the books, but in "Two Towers" Jackson throw away the most important part of his personality. Sam says that Faramir reminds him of Gandalf. And that's the point, because Faramir proves that people can be better, can grow up and evolve. For me he was hope for a future, not Aragorn, who... well, it's really hard to think of him as a normal human.

    • @CJ-vw3dt
      @CJ-vw3dt Год назад +11

      I think Peter Jackson wanted to make this 'grow and evolve' part more visible, by showing him struggling. When he decides to let Frodo go he knows that this means that he loses any chance of gaining the love of his father, and might likely die for it. This gives it for me even more impact than just the easy decision in the book.

    • @andreasmeelie1889
      @andreasmeelie1889 Год назад +1

      So what Faramir do differently from the books in the movie?
      I honestly didn’t understand that part in the video.

    • @jenniferzamboni9154
      @jenniferzamboni9154 Год назад +3

      @@andreasmeelie1889 Faramir was never tempted by the ring in the book. He never brought the hobbits to osgilieth. His character was purely good. Even Aragon was tempted by the ring.

  • @lainniwellehan4918
    @lainniwellehan4918 Год назад +20

    The ending of Love Story was absolutely horrible and unforgivable. In the book, the phrase "love means never having to say you're sorry" is used as a reconciliation between father and son, just as Jenny had used it to illustrate how love forgives all things when she first said it. In the movie, it's used to drive the wedge between father and son even deeper, pretty much to the 'unforgivable' stage, which is 100 percent the opposite of the book's message.

  • @rosebookfan7677
    @rosebookfan7677 Год назад +55

    I’m glad Divergent’s getting more talk now. Yes while the Allegiant adaptation wasn’t perfect, I personally believed that the actors did their best in bringing their characters to life & their development. The other reason why it flailed was that the creators were depending too much on the sci-fi tech for visual appeal for a dystopian sci-fi film.
    Plus there’s the added thing of making the last installment into a tv spinoff rather than finishing the ending, which none of the actors sign up for & that was a smart decision.
    If there’s gonna be a tv adaptation of Divergent let it be a reboot so it’ll do Roth’s books more justice.
    My heart still loves the films especially the actors who play Tris & Tobias, but with the recent resurgence of book adaptations like Percy Jackson, Lord of the Rings, & Eragon, here’s hoping the new cast & crew will do a good job as well.😊

    • @catvicddlm1884
      @catvicddlm1884 Год назад +1

      There's also the fact that YA Dystopia had lost it's popularaty by the time Allegiant came out, wich probably convinced the producers to stop investing in the proyect.

  • @dutchtulips
    @dutchtulips Год назад +85

    The funny thing about the big change in Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory between the book and the movie is that Roald Dahl wrote the screenplay, too, so he was the one who deviated from his own novel, LOL.

    • @SEGASister
      @SEGASister Год назад +10

      And yet he’s stated for hating this movie…

    • @thealyssac27
      @thealyssac27 Год назад +10

      I was going to say the same thing. Did he REALLY hate the movie adaptation he literally wrote?

    • @patriciaesteves61
      @patriciaesteves61 Год назад +12

      Roald Dahl wasn't the sole screenwriter - he was the only credited screenwriter, but that's hardly the same thing. David Seltzer was the uncredited writer, who changed many things against Dahl's will such as the fizzy lifting drink. Overall, the few things that survive from Dahl's original script are the references to characters and situations that would only appear in Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator (which would only be published after the film's release) such as the Vermicious Knids.
      Another bit Dahl did not write was Wonka's first appearance, leaning on his cane and leaving it behind, which came from Gene Wilder himself. I (and many others) feel it's a great introduction to Wonka's character, but Dahl absolutely HATED it.

    • @dutchtulips
      @dutchtulips Год назад +3

      @@patriciaesteves61 oh, did he? I wasn't aware of that! thanks for the correction. 👍🏻

    • @charlotteglen7896
      @charlotteglen7896 Год назад +3

      Just because he wrote the first draft and is the credited writer doesn’t mean his script was the one that was used in production. Look up the term script doctor, lots of screenplays get rewritten by other writers who are billed and credited differently. It’s pretty common to the point where “and” vs “&” in the credits denotes weather writers were coauthors or both wrote scripts that were then used in part but not full.

  • @tesstosauce4436
    @tesstosauce4436 Год назад +10

    I remember reading My Sister’s Keeper for the first time at age 14 and understanding the nuances of an ending that holds more psychological weight towards the meaning of the story than a “realistic” ending. I couldn’t stop thinking about it and what it meant. It sold the meaning of the book to me. I was disappointed to see the ending so jarringly changed in the movie but at the same time, it was hard to picture the movie working with the book’s ending.

  • @mcsapphire2554
    @mcsapphire2554 Год назад +4

    I can’t tell which ending of My sisters keeper I like better, it feels like Anna dying in a car crash is just a cop out to not have to deal with the consequences of wanting to keep her organs and kinda validates the idea of forcing Anna to give them to Kate.

  • @chibichump
    @chibichump Год назад +17

    I definitely agree with #1. I read this book in high school, bawling my eyes out during lunch as they described the car crash sequence. Watching the movie and the change they made was down right frustrating and just never sat well with me. :(

  • @ellnats
    @ellnats Год назад +33

    to be fair about charlie breaking the rules, it is probably more realistic that a kid like him would do one little bad thing, but he does make up for it by leaving the gobstopper with wonka

  • @PlayfulFruitLPer
    @PlayfulFruitLPer Год назад +25

    The biggest: How they wrote Ron in comparison to his book counterpart.

    • @ChibiProwl
      @ChibiProwl Год назад +6

      Yep. They gave every feat of his to Hermione.🤬

    • @Raven0526
      @Raven0526 Год назад +4

      YES!!! I hated how much they changed Ron in the movies. He is my favorite character in the books and they completely ruined him by making him the bumbling idiot
      I will never forgive the movies for that.

    • @melissacooper8724
      @melissacooper8724 Год назад +6

      The biggest example of that was in Chamber of Secrets. In the book Ron was the one who explained what a "mudblood" was. Hermione had no clue what it meant other than figured that Malfoy had insulted her. In the movie it was Hermione that explained the meaning of that word. It didn't make sense as to how she knew what it meant if she wasn't in the Wizarding world until she started Hogwarts.

  • @sonicguyver7445
    @sonicguyver7445 Год назад +23

    You forgot The Dark Tower. I'm up to "The Song of Susanna" now and it's staggering how much they changed for the sake of a Hollywood flick. It's only connected to the book through a few lines and a series of copyrighted names.

    • @redraven_y2k
      @redraven_y2k Год назад

      Actually you can't really add dark tower because it doesn't follow the books at all. Why do people keep missing the movie says inspired by the dark tower book series.

  • @Bethelaine1
    @Bethelaine1 Год назад +10

    My daughter and I were angry at Secret Garden. They had the children using magic instead of the healing powers of nature.

    • @erindunn7069
      @erindunn7069 Год назад +2

      See that right there is why I will never watch a newer version of that movie.

  • @tbsrevolver131
    @tbsrevolver131 Год назад +15

    Thank you for including Mansfield Park! Fanny Price’s personality change has always bothered me

    • @rollmeinrice
      @rollmeinrice Год назад +2

      In the 90s movie version she would have been a better match with the elder cousin. They could have fallen in love while she nursed him back to health... I mean they changed so far from the book anyway, they could have really leaned into it and made a really good movie. The younger brother didn't deserve her anyway in the book or the movie.

  • @tommydevito4105
    @tommydevito4105 Год назад +18

    I’m surprised the Percy Jackson movies weren’t even mentioned

  • @terryloh8583
    @terryloh8583 Год назад +5

    Actually, it's all the other children that weren't punished. They merely suffered the consequences of their own actions AFTER being warned not to do what they did (with the exception of Veruca, though she's gone completely off the rails by the time she goes down the chute). They were all ultimately rescued and restored by Wonka/Oompa Loompas.
    On the other hand, Charlie and his grandpa are left to save themselves, received a tongue-lashing that peeled half the wallpaper off the walls AND lost the lifetime supply of chocolate. After being told off, Charlie not only accepts the judgement in silence but shows contrition--returning the Everlasting Gobstopper without being asked to (against his Grandpa's advice) Remember how great a sacrifice this was given how poor he and his family are and how much money they were offered for it. This is incredibly telling of Charlie's character.
    I love this as it shows that having good character doesn't mean you DON'T make mistakes, but is revealed by how you respond when you DO; because no one is perfect, and it's HARD to do the right thing. Wonka recognizes this and he cherishes it. I think we should all cherish it--rather than chasing after the unattainable.
    p.s. Charlie's situation was different in that it is his Grandfather that holds Charlie back and suggests they take a drink. None of the other parents do this. Yes, Charlie doesn't resist at all but it wasn't either his idea or his intent as he was clearly following the others out of the room. This doesn't excuse his participation at all, but you said he did EXACTLY the same thing as the other kids, and he didn't. I'm just being pedantic.

  • @kalli-ope
    @kalli-ope Год назад +31

    The whole "Artemis Fowl" movie. They changed so many things and messed up whole motivation/plot arcs. For example: Commander Holly Short gets a hard time from her superior, Colonel Root, because she is the first female officer in the unit and has to prove herself (and validate the trust that Root put in her when he accepted her into his squad). It explains why she is overly ambitious at times, why the Colonel is so hard on her but still supports her instead of firing her/letting her die, why it is such a big deal that she is pulled into the plot as a whole. In the film, Colonel Root is a woman, for no good reason as far as I can tell - and the whole careful character-build goes up in flames.

  • @Tasha9315
    @Tasha9315 Год назад +6

    I understand the author's disagreement with changing the ending as it changed the message. But a part of me also feel it's more realistic in terms of having at least one girl survive. Kate kept relapsing, so if this was real life, there was high chance of her relapsing even if she was in remission after the operation. Then there would have been no more Anna to save her. But of course going with life's unpredictable, we can assume she was permanently cured.

  • @stacys8729
    @stacys8729 Год назад +25

    I read The Shining before i watched the film - I didn't like a lot of the changes made also, like the death. I try now to see the book and movie as separate stories now since they're so different in many ways.

    • @ashh4929
      @ashh4929 Год назад +2

      Same here. I also have to do the same with Hannibal but I don't particularly care for either ending when it comes to that particular story. 😑

    • @JeantheSecond
      @JeantheSecond Год назад +3

      The Shining movie is more inspired than faithful adaptation.

    • @imoldgreggboosh3467
      @imoldgreggboosh3467 Год назад +1

      @@ashh4929 I loved the ending of the book Hannibal. But of course movies can't end like that, so it was drasticly changed to stupidity. A doctor would never cut off his entire hand to escape hand cuffs, when cutting two fingers and chunk of palm would do it (leaving a very functional 2 fingers and thumb).
      Scott directed so many excellent movies, why did he allow this monstrosity of a rewritten ending into one of his films? Probably money . . .

  • @au_podcast7745
    @au_podcast7745 Год назад +6

    I don't mind the fizzy-lifting thing. I actually think it actually helped make Charlie multi-dimensional, showing him as somewhat imperfect, compared to what I recall from the book and even the Tim Burton movie. Yes, he did break a rule and not suffer the same sort of way the other kids did, but he at least showed some hint of repentance. The stage musical actually acknowledges this in the dialogue toward the end (which I think is a strong improvement on an issue of the 1971 film's writing); Wonka points out Charlie was the only one of the five kids who actually got away with doing something wrong when others weren't looking and later admitted they were wrong

  • @peterjyoon20
    @peterjyoon20 Год назад +8

    Harry Potter was supposed to put back the Elder Wand with Dumbledore instead of breaking it in half.
    And also, even though there is a deleted scene, they were supposed to show that Dudley and Harry squashed the beef at the beginning of part 1 of deathly hallows.
    Those, to me, are the BIGGEST things that made me MAD AF💯

    • @glowormrdr6183
      @glowormrdr6183 Год назад

      "Squashed the beef??" Never heard that before; must be from wherever you're from. You should explain slang or avoid it, or you may confuse people.

    • @GenerationNextNextNext
      @GenerationNextNextNext Год назад

      @@glowormrdr6183 It's a saying in the USA that means they ended whatever arguments or fights or disagreements they've had.
      Jonathon Green, Lexicgrapher on Quora explains: "Beef" is usually described as having animosity towards someone. "Squashing the beef" is ending that animosity.
      Beef meaning ‘to complain’ is a coinage of the mid-19th century. This quote comes from an anonymous burglar's memoir, published in New York in 1865 (though the burglar himself was English and had fled from London):
      1865 Leaves from the Diary of a Celebrated Burglar: With the intention of
      finding out whether he was likely to ‘beef’ or not, Tom asked his sister
      Til how much his ‘poke’ was ‘up to’.
      'Poke' here means a wallet (which had been pickpocketed), and 'up to' means worth, i.e. whether he complained (to the authorities) depended on how much the wallet contained. (Leaves is a fascinating book and a boon for the lexicographer - every instance of slang, and there are at least 1000, comes neatly bracketed in quote marks.)
      As regards the etymology of beef, it seems to go back to the cry of hot beef! meaning ‘stop thief!’ (quasi-rhyming slang but more by coincidence than design, since it is far older than rhyming slang's first widespread use in the 1820s-30s); thus the 18th century cry hot beef, to raise a hue and cry. This became ‘to raise an alarm’ or ‘make a fuss’ - the presence of crime was now irrelevant - and thence ‘to shout’. The 'complain' use followed that. Then (both in the late 19th century) came ‘to argue’, ‘to give someone away to the authorities’, and so on.

    • @takatamiyagawa5688
      @takatamiyagawa5688 Год назад

      I prefer snapping the elder wand in half. It instantly ends the long line of wizards that have fought each other over it. It also contrasts him with Dumbledore, who would probably have been too curious to destroy such a historically significant and powerful magical artifact.

    • @glowormrdr6183
      @glowormrdr6183 Год назад

      @@GenerationNextNextNext The context was confusing as it seemed to be referencing the handshake, not the general intent. And being a sexagenarian American, if it confused me, it might confuse many. It is NOT a "saying" unless it's generally familiar.

    • @melissacooper8724
      @melissacooper8724 Год назад

      The part where Harry and Dudley make amends before the Dursleys go into hiding was in the deleted scene of Part 1.

  • @sannygirl15
    @sannygirl15 Год назад +8

    For me "Hunger Games" (Panem) is missing. They changed the fact from who Katniss got the mockingjay thing (Sorry for my bad english, I am no native speaker)

  • @toddhanzlik1516
    @toddhanzlik1516 Год назад +6

    In the film adaptation of Dean Koontz's "Odd Thomas", the film was pretty good but it's a shame that 1) they didn't have the ghost of Elvis and 2) they diminished Ozzie Boone's character to a cameo of Patton Oswalt.

  • @DanielleBaum
    @DanielleBaum Год назад +8

    i love the lotr movies but that scene with faramir had me so pissed at Jackson. it totally betrayed faramirs character because he wasn't like his brother, but more like strider

  • @LaLayla99
    @LaLayla99 Год назад +14

    I liked the 90's Mansfield Park as its own movie, but not as a JA adaptation. My biggest movie change pet peeve is in the first Narnia movie. While I enjoyed the movie as a whole, they did bastardize my favorite line from the book. In the book when the kids and the beaver approach Aslan's camp, Lucie says she is nervous about meeting a lion. Mrs. Beaver says you should be & Lucie asks if he's safe. Mrs. Beaver says of course he's not safe, but he's good. He's the King. In the movie they give part of the line to Tumnus, but not until the very end. I was so upset! Mrs. Beaver's line in the books just encapsulates who Aslan is and they ruined it.

  • @stefanjentoft8107
    @stefanjentoft8107 Год назад +4

    For as bad as Faramir trying to take the ring is, the scene from LOTR that gets MY goat is Gollum talking Frodo into sending Sam away on the stairs. It is a monumentally colossal slap in the face of everything that the dynamic between Frodo and Sam is in the book and I honestly find that scene quite literally unwatchable.

    • @fisheyenomiko
      @fisheyenomiko Год назад +1

      YES. OMG, I hate that whole section of the film... awful, awful, awful.

    • @stefanjentoft8107
      @stefanjentoft8107 Год назад

      @@fisheyenomiko I'd even go further and say that it's my least favorite scene of any of the 6 (yes, 6) movies.

  • @kristinab3838
    @kristinab3838 Год назад +17

    I love My Sister's Keeper. It's one of my I need a good cry movies. I've never read the book, so with the movie we got with all the other adaptations in it, if Anna died in a car accident and Kate got to live with her kidney. I honestly would rolled my eyes, probably would have been pissed. I would have thought, "That's some Hollywood BS right there."
    There was just something so tragically real about how the family was dealing with Kate's cancer and Anna dying in a car accident and Kate getting the kidney anyways, would have cheapen the movie.
    And how is the message of the fragility of life is lessened when an 18 year old dies of cancer that she was fighting since she was a toddler, when compared to an 11 year old dying in a car accident? Both deaths are unfair and tragic.

    • @coasttocoast2011
      @coasttocoast2011 Год назад

      Anna is 13 in the book

    • @SEGASister
      @SEGASister Год назад +12

      “The main character wins the right to her body! Oh… she dies in a car crash and has to give up her kidney without her consent anyway, therefore making the entire point of the book moot.”

    • @coasttocoast2011
      @coasttocoast2011 Год назад

      @@SEGASister exactly, classic Jodi Picoult
      Another good one, perfect match - Mum kills priest for sexually abusing her child, oh wait the priest donated his bone marrow and it was the recipient who actually molested the child

    • @lstarsabb
      @lstarsabb Год назад +2

      I was smart enough to watch the movie first and I'm glad i need i probably wouldn't have been interested knowing that Anna life was only to save her sister.

    • @darylesells19
      @darylesells19 Год назад

      No idea there was such a divide where the endings were involved, at least not until I watched clips from the movie years later. While I get liking the source material and preferring the emotional impact of a sudden death, to me it made everything Anna fought for in the first place completely pointless. The book lovers can see it however they please of course, but in the end my personal take away was that Anna still ended up being a spare set of parts for her sister in the end. Had I read the book first, or at all, I'd have felt so cheated by the end.
      As if there had been no point at all in reading it just for Anna to die out of nowhere and end up being the thing she desperately wanted to no longer be. Kate was more than ready to go and her simply explaining it to her mother was a lovely part of the film showing how far both characters came from the start of their respective stories.

  • @r.i.o.tindustries
    @r.i.o.tindustries Год назад +42

    Am I the only one who loved the Charlie and the chocolate factory with Johnny Depp, I looooved it.

    • @pinkey943
      @pinkey943 Год назад +1

      I bought that movie

    • @laurenmalone8335
      @laurenmalone8335 Год назад +5

      I really like both adaptations. The burton one has a bit of a darker feel to it and when I read the book I definitely got a dark vibe from it. But I also like the original

    • @glowormrdr6183
      @glowormrdr6183 Год назад +5

      I definitely do like both versions. Since when is weirdness a negative of Tim Burton? It's a feature, not a glitch, as they say. I didn't mind at all that they tried to explain why Wonka was so odd.

    • @themayhemofmadness7038
      @themayhemofmadness7038 Год назад +2

      I liked it. So you aren’t alone.

    • @ChibiProwl
      @ChibiProwl Год назад +1

      I love that version. 😌The original version with Gene Wilder as Willy Wonka creeped me out.😨There was that creepy song he sang in that tunnel, then those horrid, creepy looking, monotone sounding oompa-loompas.

  • @aaronmartinez840
    @aaronmartinez840 Год назад +15

    For Allegiant it was supposed to be a 2 part film. I think they were going to kill her off in Ascendant. But because of abysmal box office and reviews the studio was gonna make it a TV movie. In I am Legend I prefer the alternate ending because it's more accurate to the book. Harry Potter series they did both Ron and Ginny dirty. Some of Ron's best moments in the books were given to other characters and he did things that Ron in the book would never do.

  • @shaliseshaw9385
    @shaliseshaw9385 Год назад +16

    I still hate that Dumbledore yells at Harry Potter when he asks him if he had put his name in the Goblet Of Fire when he asked him calmly in the fourth book, Ludo Bagmen, and other characters are absent(Winky and the other house elves don't appear, the SPEW subplot is absent, Dobby doesn't wear the hats he wore in Harry Potter and the Order Of The Phoenix, etc.), The Dursleys don't appear, the Burrow being burned in Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows part 2 was unnecessary, etc. Mike Teavee is a video game fanatic in Charlie and The Chocolate Factory(2005) instead of being a Western movie fan, Charlie Bucket and Grandpa Joe drink the fizzy lifting drinks in Willy Wonka and The Chocolate Factory when they followed the rules in the book, Veruca Salt and Violet Bureaguard become best friends when they never interacted with each other, the Mrs. Teavee, Mrs. Salt, and Mr. Gloop aren't with Augustus Gloop, Veruca Salt, and Violet Bureaguard in Charlie and The Chocolate Factory(2005), The Grinch has a backstory on why he hates The Whos in How The Grinch Stole Christmas(2004), The Cat In The Cat In The Hat(2003) is obnoxious when he's nice in the book, and he cleans the house with his machine, Thing 1 and Thing 2 don't get caught by Sally's brother in the movie, Sally's brother isn't the narrator(Sally and her brother were nice in the book, but Sally's brother is bad in the movie, the mother is a physical character in the movie, when she wasn't shown in the book, etc.), Rita Skeeter turning herself into a beetle to get her false stories from The Slytherin students in Harry Potter and The Goblet of Fire book is absent in the movie, Ron Weasley and Harry Potter speak like Crabbe and Goyle in Harry Potter and The Chamber Of Secrets, but they have their normal voices in the movie, etc. 🎥🎥🎬🎬🎬🎬🎬🎬

    • @robchuk4136
      @robchuk4136 Год назад +1

      That's why I liked the original Dumbledore better than the replacement. He'd never snap at Harry like some sort of abusive authority figure. RIP Richard Harris.

    • @melissacooper8724
      @melissacooper8724 Год назад

      I'll forgive the SPEW subplot being omitted from Goblet Of Fire because I kind of got annoyed with it in the book. But the one thing that I can't forgive is that Aunts Sponge and Spiker didn't die in the movie. In the movie they pursued James and company across the ocean while they were simply crushed to death by the giant peach.

  • @TechBearSeattle
    @TechBearSeattle Год назад +8

    The omission of Tom Bombadil in The Fellowship of the Ring was unforgivable to me. He always gets deleted, but that scene establishes exactly how the Ring preys on people, by offering them exactly what they want. Tom already has everything he could ever want, so the Ring has absolutely no power over him: it cannot turn him invisible, and he is able to toss it back to Frodo as if it were just a pretty rock. The scene, in turn, explains why Gandalf, Elrond, and Galadriel were terrified to so much as touch it: they wanted to end Sauron, and the Ring would have been too precious (I went there) a weapon to not use. It also explains why Boromir went crazy: he wanted to use it to protect Gondor so the Ring was able to corrupt him just by being in close contact. And lastly, it explains why Hobbits were largely immune to the Ring's corruption, as Tolkien describes them as "generally content, wanting little beyond a dry hole and and a full larder." There was little the Ring could hook, which is why Frodo continued to be the Ringbearer.

    • @koboldmaki6014
      @koboldmaki6014 Год назад

      I completely agree with you. I read the books when I was about 11 and Tom Bombadil was my favorite character in the whole series. My parents had me read the books before letting me watch the movies, and although I loved them, I kept on waiting for him to appear during the first movie.

  • @snapesnappedsaidsiriusseriousl
    @snapesnappedsaidsiriusseriousl Год назад +5

    "Number 4: Ginny".
    Hit the nail on the head there. I laughed too hard.

  • @Qu1nt0-415
    @Qu1nt0-415 Год назад +11

    I really like the hobbit and harry potter movies, you've just gotta think of them as separate things and enjoy them for what they are, rather than what the source material wanted them to be.

    • @mik1of3
      @mik1of3 Год назад +1

      I’m one of those who love the Hobbit movies instead of the book. The book to me was boring, and I loved the movies.

  • @Sate12
    @Sate12 Год назад +10

    Another point of contention for me with Sisters Keeper was how close they put Kate giving up to the death of her boyfriend.
    In the book, it's sad and gut wrenching, but Kate soldiers on, keeping his memory alive. She sees her parents always fighting, her sister being used as spare parts and her brother being ignored to the point of acting out. She sees her parents treat her like glass and as the golden child. Even in the book when the cancer is gone, her parents still use Andromeda as their own personal organ bank.
    In the movie it boils down to "the boy I liked died and now I will die too" and they never address when or why the brother became an arsonist

  • @emmerzk93
    @emmerzk93 Год назад +5

    Ginny!!! I’m listening to Jim Dale‘s audiobooks right now of Harry Potter and Ginny is a delight every time she appears. Justice for Ginny! 😅❤

  • @LittleMissLion
    @LittleMissLion Год назад +2

    I don't mind the 90s Mansfield Park. Even though it goes a bit off book, I do find what they did quite interesting. I think it makes sense that as an introvert she's comfortable enough to let Edmund into her little world, but is quiet and reserved with everyone else.

  • @rosebookfan7677
    @rosebookfan7677 Год назад +17

    Despite the changes, I thought that some of the changes in the last two Divergent films were well & done. For Insurgent, I felt that they tackled well with Tris’s guilt & grief which was one of the main focus in the story. The change with the box actually help strengthen the plot of the book as the events in the book made it difficult to follow sometimes with so many unnecessary details. The only thing that I wished they’ve could exclude (not complaining too much though) was the love scene between Tris & Tobias as it was first played out in Allegiant. The other thing I wish they included was Marcus’s involvement as his character tied in with the faction history, his relationship with his family, & to Tris’s parents.
    For Allegiant, again be better if the creators didn’t heavily rely on the tech part of the Sci-fi elements. I’m not entirely sure this a change per say, but I like how Tris was really stepping up into the leader role in the film. Not saying that she was in the Allegiant book, or the entire series, which she was. It’s just that for the film we really get to see her trying to help the people of Chicago after realizing the whole entire faction system was an experiment. And the scenes were she speaks up to the council & her “final” scene were really empowering. If they would’ve finished the films then it would’ve been a home run.😆
    And for the entirety of the series, is some of the pivotal characters like Amar, Shauna, & Zeke as they were pivotal to the stories as well and the characters that did get included in the last 2 films but not in the first as it was in the book were Uriah, Marlene, Lynn, Hector as they didn’t get the screen time they’re supposed to have in the adaptations.
    Again if there’s a chance that Roth’s TDS gets a redo like Percy Jackson, here’s hoping they’ll do it more justice to the books while making changes that are necessary to the plot & characters 🤓

    • @alleriapython
      @alleriapython Год назад +2

      Quite honestly I hated Tris's death in the books. ROTH put all this emphasis on Tris being divergent and that's what made her worthy of being a leader and then kills her with a poison that the true divergents are immune to. She broke her world in the writing and I can't forget that. Allegiant was nothing like the books.

    • @rosebookfan7677
      @rosebookfan7677 Год назад +2

      @@alleriapython I didn’t like that she killed off Tris either, but no matter our preferences, it’s how Roth wrote it & it’s okay to not agree with everything that Roth or any other writers do with their stories and characters (DOBBY!🥺😢😭) but we still must respect their decisions. Their books their writing their rules. Something I learned as a writer 🤓
      Plus sad as it is, Tris’s death was pivotal to her character. All her life she felt that she wasn’t as selfless as her family & home faction, but learning of her divergence, her time in dauntless, & the willingness to do anything to save the people she loves shows how truly selfless Tris was, it’s sad yes, but in a way beautifully poetic at the same time & that’s great writing coming from Roth!😎🤓🤩👏

    • @lindalaufer2949
      @lindalaufer2949 Год назад

      YES. this is why the movies were btter than the books for this series (other than divergent, I liked the first better than the movie, which felt very off to me). Like. A lot of tris and tobias's romance is played off as sexual tension. Also tris calls him tobias in the movies, and they have her call him four in the books.
      One thing i didnt really love about the second movie was the whole sex scene because tris is literally STATED to fear intimacy and the movies just did that for better reviews.

  • @abbyrose6660
    @abbyrose6660 Год назад +5

    ginny isnt the only character that got a disservice in the movies, they did ron wrong too. they really dumbed ron down and gave his moments to hermione. like in the philosophers stone, ron has to remind her that shes a witch to beat the devils snare. then in the prisoner of azkaban, its ron who says ‘if you want to kill harry then you’ll have to kill us too.’ they made hermione this seemingly flawless character which she really isnt and portrayed ron like this bumbling idiot when he is really the glue that keeps the trio together.

    • @julkasteven8198
      @julkasteven8198 8 месяцев назад

      And in Order of Phoenix film another of Ron's lines is given to Hermione. When they Discover Harry's "I must not tell lies".

  • @luikanami
    @luikanami Месяц назад

    Thanks so much for including Faramir!!

  • @einahsirro1488
    @einahsirro1488 Год назад +1

    THANK YOU for mentioning Mansfield Park. Oh, it drives me nuts what they've done to it. Over and over. BLEAH!!!

  • @alangorman2829
    @alangorman2829 Год назад +9

    You missed Eargon. A film changed so much (and so bad) they shoeboxed themselves out of any chance of a sequel.

    • @ChibiProwl
      @ChibiProwl Год назад +1

      Yes😌They murdered that book.🤬

  • @thenecrosanct4906
    @thenecrosanct4906 Год назад +7

    The best thing anyone can do is to view source material and adaptations as separate entities. I have yet to see an adaptation that is entirely faithful to the source material. Especially when it comes to adapting books to the screen, a lot of details are lost.
    That's not to say any alteration is fine because it's an adaptation. They should try to achieve a faithful adaptation, or as much as possible, as the medium allows (what works in books might not work in movies, and vice versa; that's a fact no one can get around). Changing storylines, characters or, worst of all, violating its spirit and turning it into something else, should not be encouraged or applauded. It's almost like the director and screenwriters are saying they can write a better story than the author whose work they are adapting.
    It's an increasingly hot topic these days, handled with a lot of toxicity, both from those who love the source materials and those who love the adaptations. The first are deemed purist and elitist by adaptation lovers, while the second are deemed not true fans by source material lovers. And so it goes back and forth. It's a generalization, of course, but for the most part it holds true, if you look at social media, at least. Right now The Rings of Power is a prime (pun intended) example of this.

  • @calicokaels
    @calicokaels Год назад +4

    Honestly for the most part changing books doesn't bother me that much. I've learned to not expect too much as well as separate movies from book, and I find I end up loving movies that other hate due to changes.
    Most times I find it's about whether the movie was just done well in general or not. For example, I throughly disliked Allegiant... but I feel it was just done/written bad. I absolutely LOVE Beautiful Creatures, yet there are *so many* changes.
    I will always remember going "this isn't how the book goes! No, this isn't what happens." During the fight scene in Breaking Dawn Pt 2 though. In the end I love how they did the movie, but damn in the moment that first time... 😅😅

  • @skyeyoung4446
    @skyeyoung4446 Год назад +9

    One of the most unforgivable changes from book to movie that wasn't included was Blood and Chocolate.

    • @LalaithQuetzalli
      @LalaithQuetzalli Год назад +1

      That one I like the movie, but on its own, not as an adaptation of the book (as, really, it has nothing to do with the book!)

  • @jillevers1432
    @jillevers1432 Год назад +1

    You made some interesting points. Especially Ginny, looking back, I guess that love line felt forced upon as the movie progressed. Another subject, what about the story/movie Roald Dohl’s Witches? With the endings different?

  • @Ashmo613
    @Ashmo613 Год назад +3

    The Relic:
    *They took out the main character
    *They changed the most suspenseful scene from it actually being the creature to it being a cleaning lady with a cart
    *They revealed a surprise that was in the epilogue of the book midway through the movie
    *The creature looked and moved completely differently from what it did in the book. It should have been stealthy, making it able to sneak up on people
    *They changed the ending from the suspenseful, exciting one in the book to a ridiculous one in the movie

  • @timwillard4298
    @timwillard4298 Год назад +5

    Movies that have the exact opposite ending from the book have always been a pet peeve of mine, including very well known movies like Our Town (she lives) and Breakfast at Tiffanies (she stays).

    • @talkingintothevoid9074
      @talkingintothevoid9074 Год назад

      What? Someone changed Our Town? But the whole of Act 3 **is** her being dead and accepting it!

  • @HWR_-eb5fm
    @HWR_-eb5fm Год назад +13

    In my eyes, the Percy Jackson movies were the most unforgivable movie adaptations ever made. So glad the series is getting a second chance with Rick Riordan actually involved this time.

  • @briannajanssen6121
    @briannajanssen6121 Год назад +10

    I’m a huge Jody Piccoult fan and My Sister’s Keeper is one of my favorite novels. So, when I learned they were making it into a movie, I was super excited, until I watched it. Killing off Kate due to her cancer is sad, I’m not going to lie, but the ending of the book is just heartbreaking. Changing the ending of the movie is just disappointing. I wasn’t happy and I’m sure other fans of Jody’s work weren’t either.

  • @Gerilyn2003
    @Gerilyn2003 Год назад +2

    When talking about I Am Legend; how about at least a mention of "The Last Man on Earth" 1964, starring Vincent Price.

    • @kelleyceccato7025
      @kelleyceccato7025 Год назад

      Especially considering that Price has twice the energy and charisma of Charlton Heston.

  • @ArchiesMom518
    @ArchiesMom518 8 месяцев назад +1

    One thing I will say in favor of the Harry Potter movies as opposed to the books, I read the book's after so I was expecting this huge amazing scene with professor mcgonagall as she prepares to defend awkwards. And yes the 1 in the book was amazing but the way they did the spell and bringing the statue's life in the movie was just too perfect.

  • @keirarees3179
    @keirarees3179 Год назад +1

    I know they couldn’t include everything from book to film regarding Harry Potter but there was so much that left many gaping holes and had many of us scratching our heads. I love the films but get lost in the books, we never got to see Nearly Headless Nick after the 2nd film, no Peeves.

  • @izunaga8539
    @izunaga8539 9 месяцев назад +1

    I‘ll never get over My sisters keeper. The movie is so shallow that the ending doesn‘t bother me the most. It fits rhe rest. Instead that for once everyone (herself as well) has to really take notice what Anna wants and needs, the movie has Kate central and the others only react to her. The book shows how others are suffering, how different it is for each person and how this is contraintuitive or conflicting. The book ending is so brutal because the reader and Annas family lerns, what an amazing person she is and how she can now live her life and do things like playing hocky, but then, right after the jurney full of hurt, after her being a fully funtioning person, it is all taken away. She never knew life without suffering and never will. Her future is taken away and the family now has a great emtyness after realizing, that even when they thought otherwise, they really only had her as a donator. Of course the book shows how it isn‘t black and white and that the family is evil or whatever, but they all couldn‘t live thier life. Kates cancer took up the space and time. After the courtcase they learned how to change that, but without Anna.
    It is my favorite book and I cry everytime I read it. For me the biggest unforgivable change for the movie (after making it all about Kate) is that Jessy has such a small role. The parents fight for Anna (because of her role as donator - they need her), but they gave up on their son. He has no one to talk to and sets fires so that he can feel close to his father and like he has an effect on the family/in life. They put him aside and this injustice (again) isn‘t shown in the movie.

  • @scripttoscene
    @scripttoscene Год назад +26

    Unpopular Opinion
    I honestly believe ‘My Sister’s Keeper’ movie version’s ending is better than the book version.
    I saw the story as Anna’s right over her own body against her given responsibility to save her sister from her parents. The movie’s version completes that story with Anna winning her right and facing the consequences of her choices. While I believe Anna had every right over her body and no 11 year old should be forced in her situation, it’s important to highlight the consequences and why it was such a complex situation to begin with.
    I think the book’s version doesn’t conclude that story and honestly comes across as throwing a plot twist for the sake of a plot twist. I understand the argument of the book’s story is about how random life can be. But I think the story of someone’s control over their body stands out more, is more unique to follow and should had been the main focus.
    Plus, I honestly thinks it’s a slap in the face for Anna and actually Kate too of having Anna ending up giving her kidney to Kate (literally without her say) after she won the right for her body with Kate’s support and encouragement.
    It’s such a delicate subject and I don’t think a random car crash was needed other than to manipulate the audience’s emotions.

    • @GenerationNextNextNext
      @GenerationNextNextNext Год назад +12

      I just made a similar comment! You read my mind! It's like they were punishing Anna for making her own decision, trying to paint her as selfish. The car crash was to basically state she should have given up her body parts as asked because it would have happened anyway. I feel like that stripped the agency of the main character. And now the sister is alive but without her sister, so what did she really gain? She's alive, but is she really living?

    • @coasttocoast2011
      @coasttocoast2011 Год назад +3

      That’s classic Jodi Picoult, she had a similar plot twist in ‘Handle with Care’ a the family sued their obstetrician for wrongful birth (their younger daughter had osteogenesis imperfecta) and won, giving them enough money to comfortably look after her but then the daughter drowned. Meanwhile both the mum and older daughter lost their best friends because they were the obstetrician and her daughter

    • @leslienope
      @leslienope Год назад +3

      Yeah it's been a while since I read the book but I remember thinking "Oh, so none of what I just read actually even mattered. Okay." And it didn't seem like it was saying anything about life being fragile and random, the message I got was more like fate stepping in to say "No, actually, this character WAS born solely to be spare parts for her sister and that is what she will be."

    • @andreagriffiths3512
      @andreagriffiths3512 Год назад

      I read the book and was really, really hoping for a ballsy ending. That didn’t happen. The whole book built up to it and then the ending was trash. I hated it. I then tried to read two other of her books but there was the same dismal ending - one about an Amish woman and the other about the autistic kid (I’m on the spectrum and I had high hopes). She can’t write an ending to save her life and I will NEVER read another of her books. It still makes me mad.

    • @crystalpritchard5065
      @crystalpritchard5065 Год назад

      If I remember correctly because it’s been years since I read the book, winning the court case didn’t mean she wasn’t going to give her sister the kidney, what she won was the choice. We as readers don’t know what she would’ve chosen to do with that win, maybe she would’ve donated the kidney anyway.
      I always found the end of the book poetic because in an ideal world, Anna doesn’t exist because Kate didn’t get cancer. Her parents were only meant to have two kids and in the end, they have those same two kids still. Anna was always meant to save her sister, and in the end she did.

  • @chelseacanales8763
    @chelseacanales8763 Год назад +7

    Given that Gene Wilder did a great job in Willy Wonka, but they changed the character of the grandfather being too, I guess, too selfish. He was somewhat a pain.

    • @DekaNovelist
      @DekaNovelist 6 месяцев назад

      I loved Grandpa Joe in the Book. And I was not happy with the way the writers ruined his character.

  • @geekymoviemom4232
    @geekymoviemom4232 Год назад +4

    How on Earth could you not include Peeta Mellark’s amputation being excluded from the Hunger Games films??? 😠😠😠

  • @brontewcat
    @brontewcat Год назад +1

    A few others - the Lawrence Olivier version of Wuthering Heights that leaves out the second part of the story - over a third of the book, and the entire second generation’s story

  • @matariki9818
    @matariki9818 Год назад +2

    Even though it would have made the movie even longer, the Scouring of the Shire was the most jarring part of the LOTR books for me. It's actually the core of Tolkien's message : he was a pessimist, and the message of the books was pretty clear : even though the Ring is destroyed and Aragorn king and Sauron defeated, the world will never be the same. The heroes don't come back to their heaven-like village to finally rest, they find the Shire destroyed by Saruman. No one cares for Frodo, Merry and Pippin turn out to be the heroes of the Shire in the eyes of the Hobbits.
    It was much more of a bitter ending than the one we got in the movie (even though I loved the movie).

  • @ljbimoore
    @ljbimoore Год назад +2

    Personally, I've never read the shining (to me, scary books are WAY scarier than movies - in other words too scary for me! 😬😱) but I LOVE Kubric's version of the story, it's one of my favourite scary movies. And I've never thought for a second that Halloran's death had anything to do with the character being black. It was a genius subversion of expectations. Because the audience believes the whole time that he's going to show up to save the day. He's the solution, he's the savior, he's the ex machina that never materializes! I have always found that to be a genius part of the movie, and one of my favourite parts. He doesn't get killed "for nothing"; he gets killed specifically to kill audience hope and expectation. I think it's genius!

    • @LaceyMaeBenson
      @LaceyMaeBenson Год назад

      I know this is days late but honestly Linda you should read the book then watch the film again. Believe me I grew up afraid of my own shadow then slowly became less of a chicken sh*t & a few years ago dived into horror novels (still don't touch certain genres though & i don't care admitting it lol.) Tbh The Shining isn't really a scary book imo it's more suspenseful & has you thinking "wtf is going on here??" You should give it a try & if it's still too scary for you I'll take full responsibility lmfao. Also Doctor Sleep the book & movie are SOOO good especially as a follow up on Danny. But yeah give it a whirl & if you do and love it please let me know! :)

  • @dinomonzon7493
    @dinomonzon7493 Год назад +2

    The James Bond films took liberties with a lot of Ian Fleming’s original 007 novels: Doctor No, From Russia With Love, Thunderball, On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, For Your Eyes Only and Daniel Craig’s Casino Royale come the closest to the spirit of the books.

    • @imoldgreggboosh3467
      @imoldgreggboosh3467 Год назад +1

      Ah you've read the books - Bond was a hard nosed bad arsed guy a la Mickey Spillane. Connery played him best, Moore's dapper gentleman was an insult to the books. Of course none of this matters, as they've used up the books and Bond is just an action hero now.

  • @DekaNovelist
    @DekaNovelist Год назад +7

    The HP movies are great but the books are better. Plus Hinny is much better in the books. I kinda wish their relationship was done right in the movies.

  • @maisy-raecatton366
    @maisy-raecatton366 Месяц назад +1

    I don’t get why they added Charlie breaking the rules in Willy Wonka. Even when I watch it as a kid I thought ‘why did they do that?’ It wasn’t in the book and it made no sense in the film.
    So glad they stuck more to the book in the Johnny Depp film.

  • @janebyrne6463
    @janebyrne6463 Год назад +1

    I saw Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring and the Return of the King (I haven't seen The Two Towers, though). I've read all three books and have seen the Rankin Bass adaptation of The Hobbit. For me, that is the definitive version of The Hobbit.

  • @gordonfan291
    @gordonfan291 Год назад +1

    shout out to The Series of Unfortunate Events movie for changing the order of events for the film. Still havent gotten past that and refuse to rewatch it for that reason. Thank goodness that got corrected for the Netflix series

  • @iamsherlocked7448
    @iamsherlocked7448 2 месяца назад +3

    Honestly, I liked the ending of the movie for my sister's Keeper movie because the mom was so terrible to Anna and Anna didn't deserve to die, I'm not saying Kate did deserve to but I feel the mom didn't deserve to win

  • @Laramaria2
    @Laramaria2 Год назад +1

    Ginny shouting "SHUT IT" was the only moment from that movie we actually saw the Ginny from the books... She wasn't even a hard character to adapt...

  • @Jenifer_R_
    @Jenifer_R_ Год назад +1

    The problem with Harry and Ginny is that there was zero chemistry between the two actors. So, every time they were on screen it was painfully obvious they were forcing something out of nothing. Rowling admitted Harry should have ended up with Hermione.

  • @TheYouy89
    @TheYouy89 8 месяцев назад +1

    The hyperfocus on Hermione is the HP movies pissed me off because a) it made Harry and Ron seem like two dimwits who cant do anything on their own and are just two meatheads who need Hermione to survive. Like yes, Hermione was a crucial part of their survival. But Ron actually came up with a lot of spells and ideas that got them out of binds. Harry is more than just good at Dark Arts. And b) they hyperfocused on the wrong things ans made her too much of a goodie two shoes. Hermione is a badass who hexes Rita Skeeter and fights for elves' right and constantly questions the system. She also knows Hogwarts' history by heart and knows exactly which rules to break to avoid getting in trouble.

  • @hgseeker
    @hgseeker Год назад +2

    Blood and Chocolate: the only thing they kept from the books were the characters' names and some of them being werewolves. Everything else was changed.

  • @zoggyzoom
    @zoggyzoom Год назад +5

    my sisters keeper ending really annoyed me, massive Jody picoult fan, but i knew they would change the films ending they always do.

  • @BezddRed
    @BezddRed Год назад +3

    Can we just say the entirety of Insurgent? I remember reading the book and loving it but as soon as I saw the movie adaptation, they changed so many things that I couldn't even begin to remember the book.
    That and every version of Phantom Of The Opera.

  • @amyywu8395
    @amyywu8395 Год назад +2

    How is Breaking Dawn not on this list? The whole "oh the whole battle was just one of Alisons visions" was so annoying! A) because its a cheap gimmick but B) SHES NOT SUPPOSED TO SEE WOLVES IN HER VISIONS! The movie has always driven me crazy with this.

    • @AliciaNash2013
      @AliciaNash2013 Год назад

      I 100% agree! I was like that isn't part of the book at all! And her name was actually Alice. Not sure if autocorrect got you or if maybe you may have forgotten.

    • @amyywu8395
      @amyywu8395 Год назад

      @@AliciaNash2013 Oh that was definitely just a brain fart 😅whoops

  • @AddieP91
    @AddieP91 Год назад +2

    What the Harry Potter films did with Ron's character was much worse. He was far more important than Ginny and the bastardization of his character was there almost from the beginning.

  • @toonninja
    @toonninja Год назад +4

    I think my sister keeper was represented well in the movie telling us the viewers sometimes it's not how the movie ends but begins