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  • Good morning Hank, it's Tuesday. Several great books by people I know

  • have recently been adapted into movies,

  • or will be soon,

  • and today, I thought I would talk about misconceptions around that process.

  • But first, some personal news:

  • I have just read a screenplay adaptation of my book, "Turtles all the Way Down",

  • written by Elizabeth Berger and Isaac Aptaker, who wrote "Love Simon",

  • and it's a really beautiful script and I'm excited now

  • because I think it might actually become a movie,

  • but I am also nervous.

  • Which I'll explain later, but first,

  • almost always, book authors make exactly one decision in the movie creation process,

  • which is whether to sell the rights to their book.

  • If you don't sell the rights,

  • no one can make a movie.

  • If you do sell the rights, the people you sell the rights to can usually make

  • whatever movie they want to.

  • Like after I sold the film rights for "The Fault in Our Stars" to Fox 2000,

  • they could have set the movie on Mars.

  • Only very occasionally do authors get approval over the casting or the script or the director or anything.

  • Now, some authors (and I am lucky to be among them)

  • do get a seat at the table when those big decisions are being made.

  • But you get one seat

  • and it is a big table,

  • which by the way is often good news

  • because I think usually casting directors are better at casting movies than authors are.

  • Like when the casting for The Fault in Our Stars was announced, people were

  • really really mad that Nat Wolff was gonna play Isaac

  • because Isaac has blond hair in the book, and I was also concerned about that.

  • But then in point of fact, Nat Wolff turned out to be the perfect Isaac

  • and also he is a national treasure

  • and one of my all-time favorite people.

  • Now, of course sometimes bad decisions get made

  • but that's rarely the fault of one person

  • and authors often get criticism for decisions

  • they didn't make and cannot control.

  • I don't just mean casting, but also when and where a movie is shot,

  • which in the U.S is determined mostly by tax incentives,

  • or when and where a movie is released,

  • which is determined by marketing executives that most authors never meet.

  • Authors are, however, often asked to communicate those decisions to fans of the book,

  • which can be a difficult thing to navigate

  • and I have messed it up a lot in the past,

  • hence part of my aforementioned nervousness.

  • Which brings me to a second misconception:

  • that movie studios do not care about fans of the book.

  • In my experience, anyway, they care a lot about fans of the book.

  • They just can't care exclusively about them.

  • Like my third novel, "Paper Towns", made the New York Times bestseller list

  • and sold much, much better than either of my previous books.

  • "Paper Towns" sold about 50,000 copies in its first year,

  • which was amazing,

  • but if movie sells 50,000 tickets in its opening weekend,

  • it is almost definitely going to lose a lot of money.

  • In fact, even selling 500,000 tickets in an opening weekend is usually considered a failure.

  • So studios have to balance the concerns of fans

  • with the need to reach a much larger audience than most books reach.

  • That's one of the reasons books can do so many things that movies can't do.

  • I mean, even cheap movies usually cost like plural millions of dollars to make,

  • whereas books can be financially viable on a much smaller scale,

  • and also the cost of writing a car chase scene with

  • robots that are on fire

  • is the same as the cost of writing any other scene.

  • And yet, even though it's free,

  • I've still never succeeded at writing a car chase scene with burning robots.

  • I will someday!

  • Who are you kidding, it's never gonna happen. You can't write plot.

  • "Welcome to my book - two people are talking in a room.

  • Sometimes they go outside."

  • Lastly, I'm not sure it's fair to say that the book is always better than the movie;

  • the book is different from the movie, it has to be.

  • I don't really think there's such a thing as a "faithful adaptation",

  • because you're turning scratches on a page

  • into visible humans speaking audible words.

  • The life a written story has in the mind of its reader

  • will always be intensely personal in a way that movies can't be.

  • And movies will always engage the senses of sight and hearing

  • in a way that books can't.

  • Movies are literally

  • "sense"-ational.

  • And so for me, the question is not: "is the plot the exact same?"

  • or "does the actor look like the character I imagined?",

  • because if you go to a movie expecting to see a book,

  • you're always gonna be at least a little disappointed.

  • But a great movie adaptation can explore the same questions as a book

  • and it can crack you open in the same places

  • and it can give you that same self-expanding experience of empathy.

  • In the end, a movie will never succeed at being a great book,

  • but it can be a great movie.

  • If you have questions about the book-to-movie process, please leave them in comments,

  • I'll answer as many as I can. Hank, I will see you on Friday.

Good morning Hank, it's Tuesday. Several great books by people I know

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