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Books and Movies
by Robert J. Sawyer
Copyright © 2001 by Robert J. Sawyer
All Rights Reserved
This column appeared in the Spring/Summer 2001 issue of
Parsec Magazine.
It happens all the time: I meet someone, they inquire about what
I do for a living, I tell them I write science-fiction novels,
and they ask whether any of them have been made into movies.
Two misconceptions underlie that question, one naive and the
other galling.
The naive misconception is that most novels, or at least a goodly
fraction of them, get made into films. The truth is that hardly
any actually do. Indeed, even most major novels don't get
produced for the silver screen. Consider the winners of the
Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America's Nebula Award,
the "Academy Award" of the science-fiction field. Thirty-six
novels have received that trophy (including my own
The Terminal Experiment, which won
the 1995 award). Of those 36,
how many do you think have been flickified?
Only two  and, as it happens, the first two: Frank
Herbert's Dune (which won the 1965 Nebula), and Daniel
Keyes's Flowers for Algernon (which won the 1966 award,
and was filmed as Charly). All the others  including
such classics as Isaac Asimov's The Gods Themselves, Orson
Scott Card's Ender's Game, Arthur C. Clarke's
Rendezvous with Rama, William Gibson's Neuromancer,
Ursula K. Le Guin's The Left Hand of Darkness, Joe
Haldeman's The Forever War, Larry Niven's
Ringworld, and Kim Stanley Robinson's Red Mars
remain unfilmed.
And if books of that stature don't get made into movies, consider
just how unlikely it is that an average novel by a midlist writer
is ever going to be filmed. In fact, only a handful of SF novels
have ever been made into movies, and in many cases the resulting
products were atrocious. David Brin's The Postman and
Robert A. Heinlein's The Puppet Masters are great books,
but the film adaptations stank. (Probably the best film ever
made from an SF novel was 1968's very liberal adaptation of
Pierre Boulle's La Planète des singes, which came
out 33 years ago as the original Planet of the Apes.)
Indeed, I had dinner recently with friends, and, as it often does
for us newly middle-aged folk, the topic of eventual retirement
came up. One of my buddies opined that I had nothing to worry
about: all I needed was for a couple of my books to be made into
movies, and I'd be all set. I told her that was precisely like
planning to win the lottery  the odds are about the same.
In fact, most authors don't get rich even when a movie is made of
one of their books. Option fees (the amount producers pay to
have you agree not to license the movie rights to anyone else)
start at about US$5,000 for a year  a nice windfall, sure, but
not life-changing. And an author's compensation if a movie is
made from his or her book is typically between US$150,000 and
US$300,000  all of which comes as a lump payment, letting the
tax people carve 50% right off the top. Now, yes, even after the
government has siphoned off its share, that's certainly a pile of
money  but it's only a tenth of what the average person needs
in order to retire with a middle-class income.
Now, what about the galling misconception? It's the belief that
a book is a second-rate form of expression. Unless the story is
committed to film, we're led to believe that the book is a
failure.
Poppycock. Despite the pernicious auteur school of
filmmaking (which promulgates the lie that the director is the
sole creator of the film), movies are enormously collaborative,
and therefore are exercises in compromise. A novel, on the other
hand, is one person's pure, unadulterated vision: it's exactly
what the artist intended, without concession or budgetary
constraints.
(This isn't sour grapes, by the way; my novels
Golden Fleece,
The Terminal Experiment, and
Illegal Alien
have all been optioned, and, at this writing [in 2001], it looks
like Illegal Alien might indeed actually get filmed next
year; an excellent screenplay adaptation of it has been written
by Michael Lennick, and David Coatsworth, executive producer of
Arnold Schwarzenegger's The Sixth Day, is slated to
produce.) [2008 update: and we got thisclose, too, but, as
with most projects that get optioned for years on end, ultimately
nothing came of it.]
People do understand this as related to other kinds of art. No
one said to Michelangelo after he finished sculpting David that,
well, gee, it's a nice enough statue, but, you know, unless they
make an action figure out of it, what good is it? And yet the
same principle should obviously apply to books versus movies:
the definitive version of Dune is Frank Herbert's novel,
not the theatrical film or the recent Sci-Fi Channel miniseries.
And my all-time favourite SF novel, Frederik Pohl's
Gateway, won't become one whit better than it already is
if someone someday makes a movie out of it. Books are an end
unto themselves, not proposals aimed at Hollywood; whether the
book is a success or failure has nothing to do with whether
Tinsel Town takes an interest.
So next time you're chatting with an author, don't ask if there
have been any movies made from his or her books. Instead, ask
where you can buy a copy of the actual, complete, finished work
of art: the original dreamer's words on the printed page.
After all, as everybody knows, the book is always better than the
movie.
Robert J. Sawyer "the dean of Canadian science fiction,"
according to The Ottawa Citizen is the author of eighteen
novels, including Starplex,
Frameshift, Factoring Humanity,
Illegal Alien, and Calculating God.
Visit his web site at www.sfwriter.com.
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