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**SPOILER WARNING**

So, let me start by saying I’m not one of those anal individuals who has the audacity to believe that everything written in a book can successfully be squeezed into a film. So when I watch a movie based of a book I’ve previously read, I watch it as it is: A movie based on a book. And usually, I’m pretty grateful that they saw in the book what I saw- a good enough story to make a film. And I realize that Hollywood is out to make money, not tell a good story, so probably what they’re thinking- is that it’s a big enough book to make into a film. Either way, I’m usually very grateful to see something I loved big enough and influencing enough people to make it into a film. And when I saw them making Lord of the Rings into a movie, I was waiting for His Dark Materials. The first series I cried reading. What I read in seventh grade.

Lord of the Rings was excellent; sure there were some differences from the book to film, as there always are. The same was true for Harry Potter. But it’s the little details that tend to get under my skin. Why would you change Harry’s scar from the middle of his forehead to the side? Why? What’s the point?

As an actress and director I understand the necessities that are pace, clarity, and conciseness. I can understand cutting scenes from the book that just can’t make it into the movie for sake of making the pace bearable. But changing a character’s name? What is the point of that? Switching entire scenes around? No. There are crucial parts that were left out of the movie and when later events occur- it doesn’t manage to miraculously make sense without them.

Now, when I watched the Golden Compass, there were those little things, like normal, that got under my skin. And I was completely fine with all those things, I was enjoying the movie. I clapped when they kept a scene that I didn’t expect them to keep.

I heard from someone, “They cut the last the last part of the book out and removed all the religious connotation.’” And since I’d actually read the book, and realized there wasn’t any real religious connotation at the end of The Golden Compass, I passed the person’s word off as something they overheard from someone else. An uneducated hearsay.

Yet at a certain part I leaned over to Cole and said, “Wouldn’t it be funny if the credits started rolling right now?”

Cole: Yeah, right. They can’t do that or there is no second movie.
Me: Yeah, that’s such a detrimental part of the book, but… the music’s kind of swelling…
Cole: No way…
*THE SCREEN GOES BLACK*
Cole: WHAT?
(It was the midnight show, there wasn’t anyone in the theater but us and some friends.)
Me: *laughing, desperately begging that it’s some sort of fake cut scene*
Cole: Did that just happen?!
*THE CREDITS ROLL*
Cole: THAT DID NOT JUST FUCKING HAPPEN.

And yeah. It did.

I’ve never been so sad over a paper to film adaptation. I cannot believe they did this to my favorite story. They are making a second film from what I hear, but they already fired the guy who did this one and hired someone new for the adaptation. Hopefully they’ll put the end of the first book into the second movie. You couldn’t ASK for a more climactic ending then what Pullman pulled in the first book. It was handed to them on a silver platter. But no, they botched it up.

For those of you that have never read the book, enjoy the film. It’s exciting and fantastic eye candy. For those of you that, like I, cherished His Dark Materials as one of your favorite trilogies of all time- don’t. It will break your heart.

    EDIT: Now that I’ve had time to recover I guess I should talk about all the things I loved about the movie.

  • Seraphina. OMG.
  • The Daemons. LOVED them.
  • The armored bears, with the exception of renaming Iofur and the scrapping the whole arena and forgetting to mention that the bears can’t be tricked so when Iorek names her “Silvertongue” it doesn’t make much sense. Yes that was a run-on sentence.
  • Lee Scoresby. FUCK YES. Double fuck yes.
  • Daniel Craig managed to pull it off (with the exception of the begging line)
  • LYRA and her imperfect teeth.
  • The entire beginning.
  • PAN. OMG SO FUCKING CUTE I WANT ONE MORE THAN EVER NOW. (I seriously carried Morn and Pumpkin around the house going, “Would you like to be my Daemon?!”)
  • Mrs. Coulter’s daemon. CREEPY. (Though when she pulled the whole, “Luke, I am your father” bit, that was unacceptable.)
  • And last but certainly not least:

  • Iorek still ripped Iofur’s (though he was renamed to something silly) jaw off. It bounced across the snow. HA. Yeah.
  • So I guess there were a lot of things I liked, in fact, like I said: I was enjoying the movie until the very end. I was just disheartened to see they didn’t actually end it the way I’d always dreamed they would. Bummer.

12 burnt buns ready to leave the oven ♥
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Slitz spoke on December 8th, 2007 6:34 pm with the words:

Sorry they botched the ending. I’ve never read the series, probably something I’ll never get around to doing. It’s always a big let down when you get to see an adaptation of a beloved book/comic book/etc. on the screen go wrong, even when they do some things right.

I’ll probably check the film out, but only because the child inside me wants to see a CG animated polar bear in armor fight shit. Juvenile of me, I know, but I can’t resist.

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Ri spoke on December 8th, 2007 7:27 pm with the words:

‘On October 9, 2007, Weitz revealed that the final three chapters from The Golden Compass have been moved to potential sequel The Subtle Knife to provide “the most promising conclusion to the first film and the best possible beginning to the second.”[25] Author Pullman has publicly supported these changes saying that “every film has to make changes to the story that the original book tells - not to change the outcome, but to make it fit the dimensions and the medium of film.”‘

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Tomorrow Can Wait » Devastation spoke on December 8th, 2007 7:49 pm with the words:

[...] worst redition possible. Sara wrote a much better entry summarizing the experience as a movie-goer on her site than I could hope to, so be sure to take a look, but I am unable to relive the experience well [...]

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Nicole Lee spoke on December 8th, 2007 7:50 pm with the words:

I finally got my post about this up, but my heart is still broken and I still feel like vomiting.

D:

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Sara spoke on December 9th, 2007 12:43 am with the words:

Slitz, if you never read the books you’ll love the movie.

Ri, I avoided pretty much all word of the movie before seeing it as to avoid spoilers, but it looks like Pullman not only supported the way they ended the movie, but requested it. (There are several different versions of this.) Though to be frank, if Pullman didn’t support it they’d probably end up screwing him over in the end. Anyway, I don’t know if I like the other changes made in the adaptation, but hopefully the person heading up The Subtle Knife won’t disappoint me.

Did you see it yet? Did you like it? I think I’m holding all my hope for the second one to be better.

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Sara spoke on December 9th, 2007 12:47 am with the words:

PS: The tragic ending of The Golden Compass was the PERFECT ending for me. but you know me, I like that realistic, tear jerking, heart wrenching end. I guess I just wasn’t expecting them to say, okay- we’ll end it here, even though it’s NOT the ending to THE GOLDEN COMPASS and we’ll put it in the beginning of THE SUBTLE KNIFE. SO much happens in The Subtle Knife, even more so than The Golden Compass, I just worry that they’ll be focused on wrapping up “The Golden Compass” rather than telling the story of The Subtle Knife. Ugh.

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Ri spoke on December 9th, 2007 12:52 am with the words:

I still haven’t seen it yet (I’m waiting for the cash from book return), but I didn’t think the end of the book was tear jerking or heart wrenching…when I read it I was more like ‘uh, wtf just happened?’

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Sara spoke on December 9th, 2007 12:56 am with the words:

I didn’t even really like Roger, but I still thought the ending was insane. I was also twelve, around Lyra’s age. It was very important to me. She’s bringing her father exactly what he needs, but it isn’t the Golden Compass, it’s Roger. It’s just sad that he betrays her trust and everything she knows and loves. Her loss is what propels her to be the person she is in the beginning of the second book. Without the end she’d never go. And with Asriel opening the portal, it’s the perfect cliffhanger ending for me.

I guess I had just already imagined it all in my head, you know? The Northern Lights above him with the glimpse of the world, and then the screen going black. And I was disappointed when it ended before the end of the story.

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Bronwyn spoke on December 9th, 2007 11:52 am with the words:

What you just said there is what I fear, lol, losing what I had in my head.

Man, I’m not sure if I can’t see it…I’ve forgotten a lot of what happens in the book so perhaps I’ll be alright?

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Sara spoke on December 9th, 2007 1:53 pm with the words:

Really, everything was great up until the end, but now that I’ve heard they are going to have it in the second movie, I’m pretty much okay with it. =)

I think you’ll like it.

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Thalo Ryder spoke on December 9th, 2007 2:37 pm with the words:

I agree.
The bear fight was EPIC.

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Sara spoke on December 9th, 2007 4:09 pm with the words:

Holy heck, yes. Aside from the fact that it wasn’t in the arena, but I can see they probably cut it out for pacing. Though still it was an important part, I can see why they may have done it. =)

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