Do Potter films spoil imagination?
'I couldn't think of anything except the movie scenes'
For many children, the actors in the Harry Potter movies --
such as Daniel Radcliffe as Potter -- have become the characters in the books.
NEW YORK (AP) -- Fifth-grader Guido Girgenti couldn't wait
to see the first "Harry Potter" movie and will probably see the
second, which opens this week.
But something has been lost in the process.
"The first time I read the books I was imagining in my
mind how I thought it looked," he said. "After I saw the movie (last
year), all I could imagine was scenes from the movie. I don't really like
that."
Fans of J.K. Rowling have long created separate, personal
pictures in their minds from reading her Harry Potter stories. But the singular
images of Hollywood, filled with special effects and beamed larger than life on
theater screens, can challenge -- and sometimes destroy -- what readers imagine
on their own.
Guido and about 30 other fourth and fifth graders at P.S. 3
in downtown Manhattan talked recently about how the "Harry Potter"
movies -- "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" and "Harry
Potter and the Chamber of Secrets" -- affect the books.
"Just like Guido, I love the Harry Potter books and I
could imagine everything in my mind without having anybody tell me what it
should be," said classmate Pace Lee. "After the movie I read the
books one more time and I couldn't think of anything except the movie scenes.
"In the movie, there's the part where they're playing
the gigantic chess game," he continued. But when Pace read the book, he
said, "I thought it was more like they became the pieces, instead of (in
the movie) when they're riding the pieces."
The more memorable the film, the more it can overtake the
written story. Few reading "Gone With the Wind" could now follow the
adventures of Scarlett O'Hara without imagining Vivien Leigh, even if novelist
Margaret Mitchell described her heroine as "not beautiful." But few
reading "The Great Gatsby" will confuse the title character with
Robert Redford or Alan Ladd, stars in two inferior film versions.
Some readers can't be blamed for picturing a movie star in
their minds. For publishers, the "tie-in" has long been a favorite
marketing technique, using a famous face to sell hundreds of thousands books.
This fall, for example, Picador USA issued a special
paperback edition of "The Hours," a Pulitzer Prize-winning novel
being released as a movie starring Nicole Kidman, Meryl Streep and Julianne
Moore, whose pictures appear on the book's cover.
Grade-schooler Pace Lee said seeing the "Sorcerer's
Stone" movie changed his image of the chess game. "It's like putting a new book out
entirely," says Christine Preston, director of publicity at Picador.
But some, including Rowling's publisher, resist an obvious
connection to the film. Scholastic Inc., which releases the Potter books in the
United States, does not have any movie stills on the covers of the two books
adapted so far.
"The publishers decided the movie and the books were
separate, and that Harry Potter was already well known without the movie,"
says Scholastic spokeswoman Judith Corman.
Some students at P.S. 3 are avoiding certain movie
adaptations, or hoping one doesn't get made.
Chloe Harrison loved Natalie Babbitt's "Tuck
Everlasting," but is staying away from the new film version. She fears
"it will ruin the whole thing for me." Lindsay O'Neill-Caffrey, a fan
of "Snail Mail No More," by Paula Danziger and Ann M. Martin, thinks
a movie would be a bad idea because it "wouldn't be as good."
Should Hollywood stop making movies out of the Potter books?
Guido Girgenti thinks they should leave it at two and let readers enjoy the
latter novels on their own terms. But Pace Lee thinks the movies might as well
go on -- they help get more kids interested in the books, and they're great
entertainment.
"Yes, the book is better," he says. "But it's
fun to sit down in your seat with popcorn, Coke and see a movie."
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