Hollywood occasionally attempts to turn supposedly ‘unfilmable’ novels into blockbusters. The Hours, Fight Club, American Psycho, and even Adaptation, were all based on what were said to be unfilmable books; although all were adapted into critically-acclaimed films.
Greencine reports on a flurry of posts relating to the supposed unfilmability of certain novels, some of them prompted by the release of Tom Tykwer’s 2006 Perfume:
There’s Will Gore [With the recent arrival of ‘Perfume: The Story of a Murderer’ in cinemas, perhaps the myth of the ‘unfilmable’ novel can finally be laid to rest] on the concept of the “unfilmable novel” and “The Unfilmables: A List of the Hardest Novels to Film” at Screenhead [including James Joyce’s Ulysses, Kurt Vonnegut’s Cat’s Cradle, John Kennedy Toole’s A Confederacy of Dunces and J.D. Salinger’s Catcher in the Rye].
In 2005 John Patterson already reported on film adaptations of ‘unwieldy’ novels in the Guardian:
“There is,” Norman Mailer once wrote, “a particular type of really bad novel that makes for a really great motion picture.” He might have been referring to such superselling potboilers as Mario Puzo’s The Godfather or Margaret Mitchell’s Gone With The Wind or, indeed, any number of middlebrow literary atrocities whose cinematic adaptations have entirely transcended their trashy sources.
In answer to my question ‘What makes a novel unfilmable?’, if I had to make a checklist of what makes novels unfilmable:
- plotlessness
- philosophical introspection (can be solved with voice-over)
- experimental fiction
- …………….
More on this later… In the meantime, if you feel like completing the list, please be my guest.
P. S. 1: now is a good time to reread Fuchsia’s comment on the ‘Nature of the 20th century reading experience’ where I asked: can one measure a book’s success by counting the number of film adaptations?
P. S. 2: My entry in the top ten of unfilmable novels:
- Time’s Arrow: Or the Nature of the Offense (1991)
- Do please submit your candidates in the comments …
P. S. 3: And maybe one last question: which films would resist successful novelization?