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The Age Of Innocence: Adaptation Done Right

In his latest video, Evan Puschak looks at the differences between Edith Wharton’s novel The Age of Innocence and Martin Scorsese’s 1993 film adaptation.

In every adaptation across artistic mediums, there is a loss. You lose something of the original, something vital. But hopefully you gain something too, ideally something that the new medium is uniquely good at expressing.

I’ve been thinking about the pros and cons of adaptation as I make my way through the entire Lord of the Rings trilogy on audiobook. I’ve been watching each of the movies after finishing the corresponding book, so I’m getting a really good sense how the books differ from the film adaptations. Some hardcore Tolkien fans were critical of some of Peter Jackson’s choices (leaving out Tom Bombadil for instance) but as the 20-hour+ audiobooks attest, you can’t leave everything in โ€” and there are long sections where the books’ narrative drags like a rusty muffler.

Comments  4

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Andrew Lilja

One of my favorite YouTubers, Patrick H Willems, has a great video on this topic too. Don't miss the follow-up Q&A video as well.

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Sarah Richey

Currently slogging my way through Wuthering Heights on audiobook in anticipation of the new Emerald Fennell adaptation. Something tells me I won't mind a film with a bit more action.

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Zach Kuhn

Please don't tell my AP Lit students who are currently reading the novel in class. I have pretended the movie diverges wildly from the text for a decade now.

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Alana Cloutier

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