Movies and Stories and Books--Oh My! by Dean Gloster
Back when I
was a lawyer, one of my law partners asked if I thought my debut novel, Dessert First, would ever be made into a
movie. (*Spoiler alert: It was not.*)
No, I told
him. My stories tend to have a lot of voice, a sprawl of subplots, and
difficult subject matter (death) leavened with humor. It’s a hard mix to carry
off as a novel—although that’s what it’s designed as. It would be even harder
to make into a movie.
Movies and
books are very different, if you’re trying to write one. Movies—of the Hollywood
blockbuster variety, anyway—have structural exactitude and not much leeway, which
novels are looser about. Novels tend to have subplots, but the movies they’re
made into pare that away and compress.
Novels do bear an imprint of the input
from beta readers, editors, cover designers, and others, but they are almost
completely assembled from the author’s words, who has lots of control. They’re a
collaboration largely of the writer and the readers—who makes up their own
mental picture of the characters and setting from those words.
While the manuscript
of the novel is most of the product, the first draft of a green-lit screenplay
is just a small ingredient in the final soup: Movies require hundreds of
experts, with gigantic sets, casting, lighting, acting, sound, camera work,
etc. The director and the stars are more important to its commercial success
than the original words in the script.
And they
have much larger budgets and scope—if several tens of thousands of people buy a
book, it’s a commercial success. If only a few hundreds of thousands of people
see a movie, it’s a horrific failure.
Novels
allow you more room to experiment. And sometimes those experiments succeed so
wildly they are made into movies, and those movies help more readers discover
the book—the seed that huge tree of a movie was made from.
Which is probably
why my law partner was asking about whether my book would become a movie—you know,
the kind of thing that generates even more money than the practice of law. Not
yet. And the economics of writing books are…modest, for most of us.
So why do
it?
Because it’s magic, creating a
world with readers using barely more than an arrangement of words.
I get to
make magic. How cool is that?
Although
movie money and the readership it would bring would be nice too.
Dean Gloster has an
MFA in writing for children and young adults from Vermont College of Fine Arts.
He is a former stand-up comedian and a former law clerk at the U.S. Supreme
Court. His debut YA novel DESSERT FIRST is out now from Merit Press/Simon
Pulse. School Library Journal called it “a sweet, sorrowful, and simply divine
debut novel that teens will be sinking their teeth into. This wonderful
story…will be a hit with fans of John Green's The Fault in Our Stars and Jesse
Andrews's Me and Earl and the Dying Girl.” His current novel is about two funny
brothers who have to team up with their friend Claire to save the world. It has
all the usual Dean Gloster novel ingredients: Death, humor, the question of
whether it’s possible to save someone, a love interest to root for,
dysfunctional parenting, and a slightly off-kilter sensibility. Also a mergers
and acquisitions lawyer dad who is missing 74 percent of his soul.
Dean
is on Twitter: @deangloster
Ah, yes. Making magic. ;)
ReplyDeleteIt IS magic, isn't it? I tend to always prefer books to movies and I think it's because the laws of physics simply don't apply to imagination.
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