The movie is a hilariously horrible camp classic the likes of which you don't see made enough these days. You say the book is actually *good* though?Killbert-Robby wrote:Dreamcatcher
My fav. book ever. This would REALLY be interesting to draw. And maybe I could redeem it after that horrible movie.
3 books you wanna make a comic for
- CaptainClaude
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OOH yes.Legion wrote:-Aberystwyth Mon Amour
Already happened.Killbert-Robby wrote:Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
Seriously, its just an awesome book, and you have a lot of elbow room drawin-wise.
My choices
The Island of Dr. Moreau - H G Wells (actually already doing that)
The Antipope - Robert Rankin
and Possibly Huckleberry Finn - Mark Twain
- Spqrblues
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There are so many different versions of the Grimm tales, I truly doubt creating your own would tar you with the same brush as someone else's. On the other hand, there are an awful lot of Malory adaptations out there, and readers probably have a lot more fatigue over seeing Malory-style Arthur than seeing unusual new versions of Grimm.bustertheclown wrote:I also am actually working slowly on a graphic retelling of the legends of King Arthur, influenced heavily, of course, by Sir Thomas Malory's compilation, Le Morte d'Arthur (shhhh! don't tell anyone!)
There's currently a fucking dreadful series of adaptations of the fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm, called "Grim Fairy Tales", or some shit, which makes me sad. I was working on adapting a bunch of fairy tales to graphic form, too, but now I don't even want to be associated in name or theme with the crap this series is producing. I'm thinking of maybe going with Hans Christian Andersen, instead.
The world of Peter Pan, beyond the actual island has always been an interesting musing for me. It would be fun to see what the pirates would see, should they actually ever set sail.
The Peter Pan idea sounds fun and full of potential for original adventures. I'd read it. Plus: pirates. How can you lose with pirates?
Ugh, I'm thinking like a marketing person.
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- McDuffies
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I would rather adapt short stories.
Which, in fact, I will. I already adapted one, and I have three more in production stages. Here goes.
-My comic Accomplished person is based on one story from the collection "Americans baby", I think. It's published here under different name.
-Rat catcher bu Alexander Grin - I have a script finished, laying around for a year now
-Kirke by Hulio Kortasar
Fourth project is actually one of collections of native Southamerican tales, collected by one of many southamerican writers, but I'm not even definite on which stories those would be.
Which, in fact, I will. I already adapted one, and I have three more in production stages. Here goes.
-My comic Accomplished person is based on one story from the collection "Americans baby", I think. It's published here under different name.
-Rat catcher bu Alexander Grin - I have a script finished, laying around for a year now
-Kirke by Hulio Kortasar
Fourth project is actually one of collections of native Southamerican tales, collected by one of many southamerican writers, but I'm not even definite on which stories those would be.
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Ubik, by Philip K. Dick. So far my favorite Dick story, and although it has a history of being difficult to successfully adapt to other media but I'd love giving it a shot in comic form.
Carmilla, by Joseph Sheridan LeFanu. Gothic horror with homoerotic overtones set in a remote Austrian Schloss? What's not to like? Also a disappointingly underrepresented part of classic vampire fiction.
Something by Shakespeare. I've been toying with the idea of doing a comic of a Shakespearean play: not because I think the finished product would be very interesting (Shakespeare's been adapted every which way already, I'm sure there's nothing I could add) but instead as a way of appreciating Shakespeare through the making of it. Probably go with the Merchant of Venice if I were to pick right now.
Carmilla, by Joseph Sheridan LeFanu. Gothic horror with homoerotic overtones set in a remote Austrian Schloss? What's not to like? Also a disappointingly underrepresented part of classic vampire fiction.
Something by Shakespeare. I've been toying with the idea of doing a comic of a Shakespearean play: not because I think the finished product would be very interesting (Shakespeare's been adapted every which way already, I'm sure there's nothing I could add) but instead as a way of appreciating Shakespeare through the making of it. Probably go with the Merchant of Venice if I were to pick right now.
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The entire point was to inspire Bunnies and Burrowsataraxia wrote:That was the entire point of Watership Down, wasn't it?VinnieD wrote:Watership Down
Not sure who the audience would be. Children would go "Ooh bunnies" Then get traumatized when one of them dies horribly.
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I think that it's just that it was always adapted by wrong people. I can imagine a superb version made by Terry Gilliam, Jean Jeunet or even David Lynch.TRI wrote:Ubik, by Philip K. Dick. So far my favorite Dick story, and although it has a history of being difficult to successfully adapt to other media but I'd love giving it a shot in comic form.
But not by Cameron Crowe, eugh.
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I....should probably read more.
The only thing I can recall wanting to do is a Faith of the Fallen parody.
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I'd love to see Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn in a graphic-novel format, too. I think it readily lends itself to that kind of story-tellingbustertheclown wrote:I've always wanted to do a comic based on the Tad Williams trilogy, Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn.
I'd love to illustrate a CS Friedman book, maybe The Madness Season or This Alien Shore.
The Exiles series by Melanie Rawn would also be something that would keep my attention.
I'd also love to do a murder-mystery based on one of Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot books. It wouldn't be as much fun if the reader was familiar with the story, though...
Those are just the first things that popped into my head, there's a lot of books I'd love to see as (or have a hand in turning into) graphic novels.
I'd love to do The Count of Monte Cristo by Dumas. Wrongful imprisonment of a good young man with everything going for him - a prison breakout, turning to a life of crime, discovering riches and --- revenge. It'd be fantastic.RobertBlake wrote:Another I would like to do in comic form is Alexandre Dumas' "The Three Musketeers".
Otherwise... I haven't read a good fiction novel in ages. I wouldn't mind doing some Pratchett or Mercedes Lackey (the Owlknight series, probably).
'ello!
Okay, that too.Vorticus wrote:The entire point was to inspire Bunnies and Burrows
Brooke McEldowney recently spent a few months doing an adaptation of A Midsummer Night's Dream, using characters from both his strips, Pibgorn and 9 Chickweed Lane. Reactions were.. mixed.TRI wrote: Something by Shakespeare. I've been toying with the idea of doing a comic of a Shakespearean play: not because I think the finished product would be very interesting (Shakespeare's been adapted every which way already, I'm sure there's nothing I could add) but instead as a way of appreciating Shakespeare through the making of it. Probably go with the Merchant of Venice if I were to pick right now.
I wouldn't want to besmirch any book's reputation with my scribblings, but if I was forced to do it at gunpoint, I might try one of Manly Wade Wellman's "Silver John" horror stories.
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One of King's best in my opinion. And the movie actually took a LOT of (unexcusable) liberties with the plot.Jackhass wrote:The movie is a hilariously horrible camp classic the likes of which you don't see made enough these days. You say the book is actually *good* though?Killbert-Robby wrote:Dreamcatcher
My fav. book ever. This would REALLY be interesting to draw. And maybe I could redeem it after that horrible movie.















