Personally I kinda liked the first season. It’s better if you forget the original Asimov story and just watch it as its own thing because it diverges from it quite a bit.

Season 2 Full Trailer - Youtube

Looking forward to see where they go after that ballsy season 1 ending. Lee Pace will continue to kill it no doubt.

    • FaceDeer@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I read the books (the first one anyway) and it doesn’t affect my enjoyment of the series significantly, IMO. I recognize that they’re very different mediums and written in very different contexts, so it’s fine for them both to be their own things.

      An analogous case that I think is probably quite similar to this was “I, Robot.” The short story collection was classic and I enjoyed much of them, and the Will Smith “adaptation” was extremely different. But The Will Smith movie’s story was still an exploration of the Asimovian three laws and so IMO was worthy of being included in the “anthology.” I thought it was a good movie.

      Generally speaking, books make for poor movie scripts and vice versa. The best adaptations require a lot of changes. The only prominent counterexample that comes to mind is Lord of the Rings, and even that one garnered a lot of complaints about the bits that were cut or tweaked.

    • stravanasu@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I don’t quite understand why they do this with books. Maybe it’s because they have to, since many names and pieces obviously refer to the book. Or maybe they do it to attract people who have read the books.

      • Karza@mastodon.social
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        1 year ago

        @pglpm @JasSmith I reckon it’s three things:

        1. Using the IP name is free marketing
        2. For better or worse, creatives want to put their own spin on the source material.
        3. In some cases, the difference in medium actively forces major changes in adaptation.
        • WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          It’s not really free tho, since IP rights cost a ton of money. And honestly, adaptations that aren’t true to the source don’t tend to do well, at least not beyond the first product.

          It used to be the case that studios could buy IP rights for peanuts and make a cheap knockoff, but that’s not the case anymore.

          • Karza@mastodon.social
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            1 year ago

            @WhoRoger free was wrong phrasing. I meant that it was a way to sidestep the lack of familiarity that stops people from trying new media. People will give Spiderman xyzabc a shot rather than try out a completely unknown IP. In a congested streaming economy, that advantage is worth quite a bit.

            • WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Sure, but the costs of IP can significantly eat into the profits, and if the studio bungles the adaptation, then it’s just wasted money.

              Scifi is a particularly tricky genre to produce, there’s almost no high-profile TV show that hasn’t been botched, cancelled or otherwise messed with.

              But scifi is still mostly for geeks and probably always will be, and they are a tricky audience that doesn’t appreciate if their classic gets destroyed.

              On the other hand, lots of completely original properties have become classics.

              So I’d say in this environment, buying an expensive, geeky property and then not using it properly, simply doesn’t even lead to easy money anymore.

              So what’s the point then, just to piss of people? Honestly it often feels like it.