tv star collector
01-21-2006, 04:19 PM
I just watched the "SERENITY" DVD this morning for the first time. I had already
read the Dark Horse comic book adaptation. I realize that, like most movie
adaptations, the comic was adapted from the original screenplay, not the finished movie. In such cases, there are usually some MINOR differences between the way a story is originally written and the final product. But, in the
case of "SERENITY," there are some MAJOR discrepancies. Spoiler Alert here:
in the comic, Shepherd strikes Mal. This never happens in the movie. But the
biggest alteration is that, in the film, two major characters (Shepherd and Wash) die! In the end of the comic, however, both characters live. Does anyone think the film would have been better had it followed the original screenplay (as depicted in the comic book version)? Were such major changes as the deaths of two key characters really necessary? If so, why was it not written that way in the first place? Did actors Ron Glass and Alan Tudyk decide
they didn't want to be in any possible future sequels and, thus, were written out by being killed off? Does anyone have an opinion about this?
read the Dark Horse comic book adaptation. I realize that, like most movie
adaptations, the comic was adapted from the original screenplay, not the finished movie. In such cases, there are usually some MINOR differences between the way a story is originally written and the final product. But, in the
case of "SERENITY," there are some MAJOR discrepancies. Spoiler Alert here:
in the comic, Shepherd strikes Mal. This never happens in the movie. But the
biggest alteration is that, in the film, two major characters (Shepherd and Wash) die! In the end of the comic, however, both characters live. Does anyone think the film would have been better had it followed the original screenplay (as depicted in the comic book version)? Were such major changes as the deaths of two key characters really necessary? If so, why was it not written that way in the first place? Did actors Ron Glass and Alan Tudyk decide
they didn't want to be in any possible future sequels and, thus, were written out by being killed off? Does anyone have an opinion about this?