Posted on 01/21/2008 7:54:07 PM PST by forkinsocket
Mass-market adaptations make Great Books go bad. Or so conventional wisdom would have it. But every so often, plundering and pillaging a canonical text for the sake of entertainment gives it the kiss of life. Take Beowulf and Paradise Lost. The unpalatable truth is that both originals are now virtually unreadable. Beowulf is written in Old English, an inflected Germanic tongue that looks a lot less like our language than one would hope. As for Miltons epic, its in normal English, but its blank verse is so densely learned, so syntactically complicated and philosophically obscure, that its almost never read outside college courses. Even Samuel Johnson, writing 100 years after Milton, said: Paradise Lost is one of the books which the reader admires and lays down, and forgets to take up again. None ever wished it longer than it is.
Now, modern popularizers have come to the rescue, with striking commercial success. Neil Gaiman and Roger Avarys film version of Beowulf has taken in more than $180 million worldwide since its opening in November. His Dark Materials, Philip Pullmans trilogy inspired by Paradise Lost, has sold 15 million copies worldwide, while the film version of the first volume, The Golden Compass, has earned more than $150 million.
But the Beowulf movie and Pullmans novel (the film is a different story) have succeeded aesthetically as well not by dumbing down the originals, but by picking up on their weirdest and hardest-to-parse particulars.
With Beowulf, the critics have talked mostly about the films video-game-like 3-D animation and mannered special effects, which recast the epic as a lavish, fast-paced fantasy. But its also successful in the way it rewrites the source material.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
Somewhat, but Pullman wanted to change the ending 180 degrees.
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