Adaptation
in sentence
1036 examples of Adaptation in a sentence
The movie is an
adaptation
of a Japanese story by the respected author Yukio Mishima.
This is a disappointing
adaptation
of the James Lee Burke novel "In the Electric Mist of the Confederate Dead".
I'm afraid I did not like this
adaptation.
Sorry, looking forward to the 2007
adaptation.
I am not a fan of the original book but was expecting to see a better
adaptation
than the Natalie Portman movie, which I found awful.
My blurred childhood memories have kept the echo of the cult serie of Belphégor in the French 60's... so I was eager to see the big screen
adaptation.
OK, let me first point out that to fit a decent
adaptation
of the novel into 2.5 hours film time would of been impossible, so I understand the teams reason to sway from the book version and differ.
So fat the only and mean only watchable
adaptation
of the WAR OF THE WORLDS story is the GEORGE PAL version way back in the 1950s.
This tatty am dram
adaptation
scrambles soulessly through the plot of Dickens' wonderful book, replacing the emotional impact with hurried transitions and any exterior locations with drawings.
Critics are falling over themselves within the Weinstein's Sphere of Influence to praise this ugly, misguided and repellent
adaptation
of the lyrical novel on which it's based.
In addition to being a bad series it is an even worse
adaptation
of Street Fighter.
This
adaptation
decided to spice up the story by adding kinky sex, extreme violence, genital monsters, body piercing and incest and it succeeded in creating a bizarre yet hilarious film.
We have also seen Coyote Waits, another
adaptation
of a Hillerman novel, and we greatly enjoyed it too.
Great
adaptation
of the Christie novel.
In Alfred Hitchcock's
adaptation
of Patricia Highsmith's "Strangers On A Train", Guy Haines (Farley Granger)and Bruno Anthony (Robert Walker)meet for the first time on a train journey and discuss the idea of carrying out two murders.
Director Jay Craven's
adaptation
of Howard Frank Mosher's 'Where the rivers flow north' is one of the finer transitions from literature to the screen.
The folks at Aardman have done a cool, cute and wild
adaptation
of their short films of Wallace and Gromit to feature length, as the man and his dog, inventors who seem to have more of the intelligence (or practicality) for the latter.
This is a pretty faithful
adaptation
of Masuji Ibuse's novel, "Black Rain."
The
adaptation
of the comic book is good, some of the pictures and the dialogs of the movie are the same as in the book.
The last film of John Huston, the great American director of the Irish descent is an
adaptation
of the last short story in the early collection "Dubliners", of the greatest writer ever came from Ireland.
First I was afraid of watching just an
adaptation
but after seeing it I have changed my mind.
Onstage John Osborne's
adaptation
of "Picture of Dorian Gray" is a fine tribute to Oscar Wilde's talents as both novelist and playwright.On screen with some editing it becomes a bit sloppy due to the cutting of 3 crucial scenes from the play (one being an important scene between Basil and Henry showing that time has passed.)The
It has a slightly dated air, being an
adaptation
of "A Way Through the Wood", a 1950 novel by Nigel Balchin (once hugely popular and now forgotten).
The latter, a high-quality
adaptation
of George Johnston's immortal novel, was outstanding - but, in my opinion, not as good as CHANGI.
It was also nominated for Best Supporting Actor (Robert Ryan), Best Supporting Actress (Gloria Grahame), Best Director and Best Screenplay (Adaptation).
This TV
adaptation
of Sarah Waters' novel was so lovingly done I can hardly find the words to appreciate it.
All in all, Australia continues its rich tradition of producing exceptional television miniseries, and is an unrivalled world leader in this regard: vyeing for the AFI Award with CHANGI is MY BROTHER JACK, the
adaptation
of George Johnston's novel, and also a worthy winner.
Miniseries in recent years include DAY OF THE ROSES (the story of the investigation into the Glanville train crash), KINGS IN GRASS CASTLES (the
adaptation
of Mary Durack's historical account of her pioneering ancestors), KANGAROO PALACE (about a group of friends from a country town in Australia who travel to London and change and grow apart), and the (somewhat disappointing)
adaptation
of Bryce Courtenay's powerful novel, THE POTATO FACTORY.
This movie is a quite fair
adaptation
of the Prosper Merimeé's novel.
You have to note are different the novel by Merimeé and the opera by Bizet, and this movie is an
adaptation
from the novel, anyway in the opera Don José is still Spanish from Navarra, never he's French.
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