While it is an everlasting debate about which is better: Movies or Books. Some people see their worlds by seeing movies and some people make their own worlds while reading books. To each its own. There are a lot of books turned into movies. While some totally capture our hearts, some do not go well as expected. So, here is the list of the best book-to-movie adaptations ever.
1. The lord of the rings (2001-2003)
Lord of the rings is the most successful adaptation with over 30 Oscar nominations – so we can securely say that J.R.R Tolkien’s epic dream trilogy was in great hands with Peter Jackson. Indeed, it was one hell of a trilogy.
2. To kill a mockingbird (1962)
A Pulitzer Prize-winning book and an Oscar-winning film. The film won three Oscars, including best screenplay and best actor for Gregory Peck’s splendid depiction of Atticus Finch.
3. Casino Royale (2006)
The brilliance of Ian Fleming’s creation, James Bond, is obvious from his books and short story assortments as well as the books and spin-off works. Daniel Craig right now plays Bond and his first trip in the job was in Casino Royale in 2006. This was based on Fleming’s debut Bond novel, published in 1953. It is really been adapted for the screen multiple times. Staying dedicated to Fleming’s story while effectively rethinking the screenplay is a task. Casino Royale was the highest-grossing Bond film ever – that is until Skyfall went along.
4. The White Tiger (2021)
It is based on the Booker Prize-winning novel by Aravind Adiga. The White Tiger is the dark and interesting story of Balram Halwai (Adarsh Gourav), whose poverty to newfound wealth ascends through India’s ruthless caste system framework foregrounds the gap isolating those who are well off from the poor. At the point when Balram turns into the driver to a well-off man (Rajkummar Rao) and his better half (Priyanka Chopra Jonas), he before long gets trapped in their snare of lies and corruption. It drives him to perpetrate a stunning yet shocking crime to get away from poverty.
5. Nomadland (2020)
Jessica Bruder’s nonfiction book with the same name was the motivation behind the Oscar-winning movie. Featuring Frances McDormand as a nomad named Fern, the film may have Fern as a starring role for a Hollywood entertainer. But the roles of Linda May, Charlene Swankie, and Bob Wells play themselves in the movie. There are a lot of honest and intricate details of them as well. Charming, insightful, and a tad strong, Chloé Zhao’s variation of Bruder’s work is perhaps the most amazing movie.
6. To All The Boys: Always and Forever (2021)
Always and Forever is the third and last film in Netflix’s super famous To All the Boys series, based on the books by Jenny Han, sees Lara Jean and her beau Peter Kavinsky at a crossroad. Recently got back from an extraordinary outing to Korea and gazing intently at her senior year, Lara Jean thinks of her college plans, with and without her lover. Also, fans of the series will be profoundly emotional and joyful by this triumphant, winsome end.