To start, I have not seen it. I don't like to go to the theater.
That said, I know many MANY who have. It seems that those who did not like it are people who complained about how different it was from the books since the whole thing was announced. The people who did like it are people who had not read the book or who went in thinking about it as totally separate from the book and did not try to compare the two.
It is the evils of making movies with a book backing them. You have fans who cry foul at ANY changes, additions, or omissions (the addition of Legolas into the next Hobbit movie is a prime example).
To start, I have not seen it. I don't like to go to the theater.
That said, I know many MANY who have. It seems that those who did not like it are people who complained about how different it was from the books since the whole thing was announced. The people who did like it are people who had not read the book or who went in thinking about it as totally separate from the book and did not try to compare the two.
It is the evils of making movies with a book backing them. You have fans who cry foul at ANY changes, additions, or omissions (the addition of Legolas into the next Hobbit movie is a prime example).
I just don't understand why they would pay for the movie rights for the book with no intention of making that story when they could have just made a zombie movie of their own? This movie isn't World War Z.
I haven't seen the movie yet, but I agree with you, have no idea why you would spend no doubt a million or more on the rights, then make a totally different movie from the book. I'm guessing the director went off on a tangent, or another explanation maybe, so many directors write, maybe this particular one had his own zombie script he wanted to do and just so happened to change the original script to suit what he really wanted to do, i.e. his film. Just a thought, have no idea if that's what happened.
He wanted the idea of the man searching for patient zero.
That wasn't what the book was about.
I don't really see how the book could have been made into a movie, but I can definitely see how the book influenced the movie. I'm sure the author could have sued if they made the movie without buying the rights to the material...not sure how it works.
"I cannot guarantee that the movie will be the book that they love. And I'm in no position to tell people to see this movie or not see it. If I'm asked I say: See the movie as a movie and judge it as a movie."
The book would have made a horrible movie. It is much better suited for a miniseries on HBO or something. Even the author has admitted that the book is NOT a good choice to do a movie adaptation on. He knew that things would be changed and drastically. He is quoted as saying:
If the author is not all that upset with how this all went, I would hope that fans would be willing to give the movie a chance.. AS a movie.
I would hope that fans would be willing to give the movie a chance.. AS a movie.
The "zombies" in "World War Z" aren't zombies at all. They're just infected, like in "28 Days Later."
But yeah, being dead (which a zombie is) is a disability, not a superpower. Zombies don't need to be fast in order to be scary.
I do realize that. I own the book.I was just pointing out that any little fact they wanted to use couldn't be used if they didn't own the rights.
Forrest Gump, the book, couldn't be further from the movie if it tried. However, they couldn't have made it without buying the rights. The tiniest of ideas that are similar could be considered copyright infringement.
I think they just wanted the NAME of the book and the subsequent buzz and popularity of it (along with the current mania for anything zombie related). It isn't World War Z. It's just a movie that uses the name.
Does anyone know what Max Brooks thinks of it? Never mind...found it: http://litreactor.com/news/max-brooks-publicly-disses-world-war-z-movie and this http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dennis-miller/world-war-z-author-says-m_b_3244960.html?icid=hp_books_top_art
Looks like he agrees with me.
I think they just wanted the NAME of the book and the subsequent buzz and popularity of it (along with the current mania for anything zombie related). It isn't World War Z. It's just a movie that uses the name.
Does anyone know what Max Brooks thinks of it? Never mind...found it: http://litreactor.com/news/max-brooks-publicly-disses-world-war-z-movie and this http://www.huffingtonpost.com/denni...r-says-m_b_3244960.html?icid=hp_books_top_art
Looks like he agrees with me.
I'll wait for the Mel Brooks remake . . .