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Book vs. Movie: Holes by Louis Sachar

2/26/2012

46 Comments

 
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I turned this movie on last night, feeling like an intrepid reporter.  I had come prepared: my dog-eared copy of Holes, a thick pad of paper, and a pen.  I planned to take extensive notes.  I had the remote poised and ready to pause this thing at the exact moment of any potential inconsistency, so I could immediately look it up in the text.

The film opened and I chuckled smugly as the boys came into view, digging holes while wearing hats with flaps to protect their necks. 
Protective hats? Pah! I know for sure that wasn’t in the book. I smell a Disney-fication! I was going to bust this thing wide open.  I paused it, flipping quickly through the text, and then found this:

“He was also given white sneakers, an orange cap, and a canteen made of heavy plastic, which unfortunately was empty.  The cap had a piece of cloth sewn on the back of it, for neck protection.”

Okay…guess I’m wrong about that one.  Moving on…

As this movie went from scene to scene…following the book almost to the word on some pages…maintaining almost everything…even the tricky flashbacks which I was 100% sure that they’d never be able to duplicate in film…even the food served in the cafeteria…I realized that this was actually the most faithful film adaptation of any book I’d ever seen.  EVER.  

My notes are one half-filled page and are comprised of things like, “Kate Barlowe = HELL YES” and “Wasn’t the nail polish red in the book, not pink?”  (I was really grasping at straws on that one.)

What are the chances? My first Book vs. Movie post and I have almost no differences to speak of!  But, I will soldier on!  I’m not a fancy blogger with three posts under her belt for nothing (that’s right, I said three).  So basically what I'm saying is that I'm here today to eat crow and tell you all how awesome this movie is.

There are a few other minor differences, but they're so minor that it  feels sort of petty to bring them up.  For example, Stanley’s Dad is developing a way to recycle sneakers in the book, and accidentally comes across a treatment for foot odor.  In the movie, he’s trying to cure foot odor all along.  Some of the scenes are switched around (although nothing major).  There’s an added scene about the yellow spotted lizards, and everything about Stanley’s day in school (prior to his arrest) is cut out (which I think was about 1-3 pages total in the book).  See? It’s barely worth mentioning.
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Design by Jan McCauley: A much more authentic looking Stanley Yelnats
Okay, so I actually do have ONE complaint: the casting of Stanley.  In the book, he is a tall, heavy boy who’s often confused for a bully even though he’s quite meek on the inside.  He’s also teased at school about his weight.  I loved that Stanley’s outside would become a label. In the movie he’s played by a young Shia Labeouf, and while I liked his performance well enough, he definitely doesn’t look anything like the Stanley Yelnats that I know.  He looks like a skinny, non-threatening nerd.
Other than that, I think the casting is just about perfect.  They’re all just how I imagined them.  There’s X-Ray, the leader, with glasses that are “so dirty that Stanley wondered how he could see out of them.”  There’s Zero, the smallest in the group, who’s so much smarter than everyone assumes.  There’s Magnet the thief and Armpit the mentor and Zig-Zag, who’s described as having “a big round head with wild frizzy blond hair that stuck out in all directions.”  They definitely captured that!
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X-Ray
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Armpit
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Zig-Zag
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Magnet
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Zero
The adult parts are also wonderfully cast, with the exception of John Voight, who gives such a crazy performance as Mr. Sir.  The only word for it really is cartoonish. He creeps around exaggeratedly, squinting his eyes and making wild gestures.  It’s just odd!  There’s a bit of a change there as well: cartoonish Mr. Sir gets a very cartoon-like comeuppance in the movie that’s not in the book.

The other performances are all wonderful.  Sigourney Weaver as the warden is quietly frightening and obsessive. Tim Blake Nelson is a smiley but cruel “nice guy” with a beard and a perpetually sunburned nose as Mr. Pendansky. And Patricia Arquette and Dulé Hill even made me a bit teary with the Kate Barlow/Sam flashbacks.
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The Warden
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Mr. Sir
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Mr. Pendansky
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Kate Barlow
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Overall, this is a wonderful adaptation of one of my favorite children’s books.  (My review of the book can be found here.)  I highly doubt that other fans of the book will be disappointed.  They really nailed it!
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46 Comments

Book v. Movie

8/1/2011

3 Comments

 
The book is always better than the movie, right? Except when it isn't. The first example that comes to mind is Roald Dahl's  The Witches. (FYI, this DVD is $4.99 on Amazon right now (8/1/11)) Frankly, if you haven't seen that movie you are insane. It scared the crap out of me as a child and if we are in the Cone of Silence right now, it still kind of gives me the creeps. I'll need to go back and reread the book to confirm my suspicions but I'm standing on the movie side of the scale right now with loads of preconceived notions and about 20 pounds of bricks. The book will really have to wow me to make me change my mind. Watch this and tell me I'm wrong:
So, I'm going to start doing a biweekly "Book v. Movie" battle. I'd love anyone else to join me, if any other bloggers/readers/movielovers/androids are interested. (What's that you say? I only know like 20 bloggers total? SHUT YOUR FACE. I will lure them to me...PUNCH AND PIE.) The Witches will be my first but certainly not my last.

I put it to you--what are your favorite book to movie translations? Horrible ones? Ones you want to see me analyze into the ground? (and by analyze I mostly mean making unrelated comments and following every tangent I go off on until I decide I'm bored of writing and just stop.)  There's a list here of yearly books into movies. Can't Hollywood come up with anything original? That's not to say that I'm not dying to see The Hunger Games when it comes out. Who the hell isn't excited for that?
3 Comments
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