A generous percentage of this year's Best Film Oscar nominations owe their origins to books: Capote to the excellent biography of the same name by Gerald Clarke, Munich to Vengeance, by Canadian George Jonas, Brokeback Mountain to a short story by Annie Proulx. Like the debate about turning a play into a movie (too claustrophobic), the notion of transplanting popular literature onto celluloid appears to be an inexhaustible subject of chit-chat.
By necessity, there's an act of simplifying, of streamlining, that goes on when a book is made into a film. This can be to splendid effect, can make the narrative stronger, more focused, faster moving. A trimming down can also leave a viewer, especially if he has loved the book, feeling somewhat undernourished. But not always. Sometimes, the experience of the movie provides a more concentrated, more satisfying effect. Here are three films that this writer preferred to the novels upon which they were based, starting, hopefully, with the least debatable.
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