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November 28, 2006

Movies About Books

Commenting on an earlier post, I mentioned wanting to see Stranger Than Fiction starring Will Ferrell and Emma Thompson. Since nothing I do these days can't wait until tomorrow, I decided to drop everything and catch a matinee. Noon on a weekday is the best time to see a movie. No ticket line, no concession stand line, no toilet line. Six people and I had the entire place to ourselves and my theater's audience consisted of me and another old lady.

Stranger Than Fiction is about a book. Ferrell plays Harold, an IRS auditor who wakes up one day hearing a woman's voice. The voice, which begins as third-person omniscient narration, belongs to Thompson, an author writing a book about Harold's life. Harold seeks help from several people and eventually is led to Dustin Hoffman playing a college literature professor. Whenever the scene turned to Hoffman's office, I tried to figure out what books he had on his packed shelves. Most of the titles were academic, so I had to laugh when he later lifeguards at the campus pool while reading a plastic bag-covered copy of Sue Grafton's I Is for Innocent. Hoffman was wonderful and the movie overall was sweet and smart.

Of course, this film reminded me of Adaptation, which is about a screenwriter trying to turn The Orchid Thief into a movie. So that made me wonder: we talk a lot about books turned into movies, but what about movies about books? Thinking over this quickly, I came up with:

Surely, there must be many others. Can anyone add to this list?



comments

Does "The Never-ending Story"? That's all I can seem to come up with at the moment.

Oh, I don't meant to double-comment but "Inkheart" by Cornelia Funke is being made into a movie.

Sure, Imani. I'd say The NeverEnding Story counts since the boy reading the book ends up as a character in it. Inkheart would probably also count when it comes out as a movie.

I'm guessing that most movies about books were probably books first. A writer of novels (like Stephen King) is likely to create characters that are authors and plots about books and writing.

(What's with IMDb and movies being listed under German titles? tNES comes up under Die Unendliche Geschichte while The Name of the Rose is Der Name der Rose. I get the first one since tNES was done by a German production company, but tNotR was made by the French and following this logic should come up under Le Nom de la Rose. Yet both films were released in English with English titles. Huh?)

I'd include Bitter Moon and Naked Lunch, as movies about writers — not in the biopic sense, but arguably about the creative process and inspiration, where fiction and reality twist into each other.

I had to look up Bitter Moon on IMDb because I didn't know that one. That and Naked Lunch (I had forgotten about this messed up movie. The book around here somewhere.) would both count toward the writing process.

Thinking about movies about writing and writers, I'd again have to say that most of them would have been books first. There are plenty of movies with writers as characters, but I think an author would be more prone to write about writing than a screenwriter.

I just thought of another one: Throw Momma from the Train. "The night was humid."

Alex and Emma, with Luke Wilson and Kate Hudson. He's a novelist with writer's block and she types the novel for him (don't know what you call that profession).

 

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