From the looks of that, it's going to take a more linear, audience-friendly approach to the story. I assume (hope) the plan would be to fill in other aspects of the story once the characters/premise has been firmly established.
Just telling the story as per the first three books was always going to be a massive, arguably impossible, challenge, and I don't think film audiences would have taken to it.
Like I said, I only read part way which involved a gunslinger in the desert on the trail of the man in black. I was really invested until at some point the gunslinger meets some sort of fairy and turned me right off. I just had a different idea in my head of where the story went.
I'll watch this but I wasn't too impressed with the trailer. I know it's not a straight adaptation of The Gunslinger, but they don't seem to have captured the Western theme of that first book which is disappointing.
Not really too fussed on that. I'm not sure Ibris is who I had in mind to play Roland. But he's a fantastic actor and I'm sure he'll do okay.
Very mixed on the book series, I loved the first four books in this series, after that, it falls apart. That one he released a few years ago was strawberry floating pointless as well.It's the only book series I have ever seen that had a disclaimer before the ending, that basically tells you that it sucks.
Only got up to the start of Wolves of the Calla but not surprised they've taken a different approach to the story, the first couple of books as a straight adaptation would've bombed with cinema audiences, just wouldn't have translated very well. Idris Elba makes for a good Roland as far as I can tell so far. American accent surprised me though, even though obviously Dark Tower is heavily western influenced all his sort of archaic language and the King Arthur lineage meant I always imagined Roland having a more English accent. Only thing I'm not keen on is no Eddie but with any luck they'll rework it to add him and Susannah in later films.
Yeah, but this seems to be taking elements from all across The Gunslinger/Drawing of the Three/Waste Lands is all I meant, like Jake's bit in the haunted house and with his visions.
Thing is, the Drawing of Three is the sort of narrative that would be dealt with by the first act of any standard Hollywood film. It simply isn't reasonable to expect a major studio-produced film to dwell on detail in the same way that King does, and certainly in such a non-linear way.
I can imagine there being a really decent origin story, that covers perhaps young gunslinger and his training, through to the events of Wizard and Glass.
(Must flag, I've only read the first four so far and am currently on The Black House. Next DT book (5) is next on the list.)