indigo-fog
indigo-fog t1_iu72git wrote
Try going for a walk first, and then when you return home immediately pick up your book and read a paragraph (or chapter). Doing a bit of cardio helps your brain perform.
indigo-fog t1_iu7173b wrote
Reply to Why are books always changed or cut major scenes out when adapted to film? by hushpolocaps69
It’s not always about length. OP is asking about important scenes specifically being cut. One of the major reasons is because the screenwriter is most often not the author. Only in rare cases will the author participate in the screenwriting process or be the sole screenwriter. And even though an author might feel that a scene is essential, and many of their readers may as well, the screenwriter is an artist in their own right and will engage with the material differently, and understand the story differently, creating a whole new work of art with the source text. They are building a multi-sensory experience for the viewer, while the author can only try to evoke that experience through inspiring a reader’s imagination. With a new medium and new artistic personality, a new work of art gets created that can appeal to people who have not engaged with the source text at all. At the root of it is a difference of opinion in terms of what is deemed important.
indigo-fog t1_iujtzc8 wrote
Reply to Thoughts on Beautiful World, Where Are You? by riyagupta_30
It was my least favourite Rooney novel. The frequent switch into first person perspective felt so jarring. Without that, I think I would have liked it more.