Cover image of show Books vs. Movies

Books vs. Movies

Podcast by Lluvia

English

Culture & leisure

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About Books vs. Movies

In this podcast we set out to answer the age old question: is the book really always better than the movie?

All episodes

75 episodes

episode Ep. 63 The Lord Of The Rings by JRR Tolkien vs. The Lord of the Rings Trilogy (2000s) artwork

Ep. 63 The Lord Of The Rings by JRR Tolkien vs. The Lord of the Rings Trilogy (2000s)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2310476/fan_mail/new] The Lord of the Rings movies are legendary, but once you read Tolkien, you start spotting the choices that quietly reshape the entire journey. I’m comparing J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings [https://bookshop.org/a/103238/9780358439196] to Peter Jackson’s Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers, and The Return of the King, and I’m sticking with the theatrical cuts so the comparison stays fair and consistent. I dig into what changes when a single, enormous novel becomes a clean film trilogy: time compression, earlier reveals, and the need to show what the book can simply tell. That means big swaps like cutting Tom Bombadil, pulling Glorfindel’s rescue into Arwen’s storyline, and reorganizing Moria, Boromir, and the fellowship’s split to hit stronger act breaks on screen. Then I get into the most controversial stuff: why The Two Towers makes the boldest adaptation moves, how Faramir’s choices shift, and why the added romantic tension around Aragorn, Arwen, and Eowyn feels messier than it needs to be. On the Return of the King side, I talk Shelob, the Sam and Frodo conflict, and the ending the movies leave out, including the Scouring of the Shire and Frodo’s lingering PTSD. If you love book vs movie debates, Tolkien lore, or the craft of adaptation, hit play, then subscribe, share the show, and leave a rating and review. Do you side with the book or the films? All episodes of the podcast can be found on our website: https://booksvsmovies.buzzsprout.com/share [https://booksvsmovies.buzzsprout.com/share] Connect with me: https://www.instagram.com/rainydayreads2021/Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/booksvsmoviespodcast/]| Threads [https://www.threads.net/@rainydayreads2021] | Bookshop [https://bookshop.org/shop/booksvsmovies] | Goodreads [https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/24006232?ref=nav_profile_l] | Blog [https://lluviareviews.blogspot.com/]

21 May 2026 - 1 h 25 min
episode Ep. 62 Hamnet by Maggie O'Farrell vs. Hamnet (2025) artwork

Ep. 62 Hamnet by Maggie O'Farrell vs. Hamnet (2025)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2310476/fan_mail/new] Shakespeare’s most famous tragedy might have started with a quieter one, and that’s what makes Hamnet so hard to shake. I’m Lluvia, and I’m putting Maggie O’Farrell’s bestselling historical fiction novel Hamnet [https://bookshop.org/a/103238/9781984898876] up against its 2025 film adaptation directed by Chloe Zhao, starring Jesse Buckley and Paul Mescal. If you love book vs movie debates, this one is a masterclass in how the same story can land differently depending on structure, pacing, and what details the camera can’t hold. I talk through Agnes as a healer in late 16th century England, how her “strangeness” reads as power and danger, and why the novel’s attention to nature and the woods gives the family story so much texture. Then we get into the adaptation choices: the book’s bold time jumps versus the film’s chronological approach, what gets streamlined, and what the movie beautifully preserves in tone, grief, and performance. Yes, I go into spoilers once I hit the turning point, including what the Hamlet name means and how the story frames the loss of Shakespeare and Agnes’s son. I also dig into the moments that wrecked me most: the twin bond between Hamnet and Judith, the plague as both a plot engine and a chilling reminder of how illness travels, and the way art can become tribute without “fixing” anything. I end with my ratings for both versions, why the book takes the win for me, and what’s coming next on Books vs. Movies with The Lord of the Rings. Subscribe for more book-to-screen breakdowns, share this episode with a friend who loves adaptations, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. All episodes of the podcast can be found on our website: https://booksvsmovies.buzzsprout.com/share [https://booksvsmovies.buzzsprout.com/share] Connect with me: https://www.instagram.com/rainydayreads2021/Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/booksvsmoviespodcast/]| Threads [https://www.threads.net/@rainydayreads2021] | Bookshop [https://bookshop.org/shop/booksvsmovies] | Goodreads [https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/24006232?ref=nav_profile_l] | Blog [https://lluviareviews.blogspot.com/]

30 Apr 2026 - 45 min
episode Music Tames The Wolfe; Interview with Author Rick London artwork

Music Tames The Wolfe; Interview with Author Rick London

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2310476/fan_mail/new] A werewolf story set in the San Francisco Bay Area sounds like it should end in blood, but Rick London flips the myth in a way we couldn’t stop talking about. His novel The Dancing Wolfeman [https://bookshop.org/a/103238/9798295463136] follows Titus Wolfe, a high school music teacher and nighttime DJ who gets bitten and faces the moment every werewolf fears: the first transformation and the urge to kill. The twist is surprisingly human and deeply cinematic, music becomes the force that pulls his mind back from the edge.  We unpack how Rick builds a paranormal romantasy adventure thriller that keeps the monster on the page while refusing the usual “killer then hunted” blueprint. He shares the real life spark behind the premise, a trombone in his home that led him to connect music with memory, identity, and control. From there, we get into adaptation dreams and realities: which key beats must stay, where film changes might help, and why he’d want to be present as a consultant to protect the story’s arc without trying to run the writers’ room.  Then we go full casting and directing. Rick names the actor many readers picture as Titus and explains why he’d rather see fresh faces in lead roles with A-list support to pull audiences in. He also shares the scene he’s most excited to watch on screen, a cliffside confrontation that captures the theme of mercy over instinct and sets up unexpected alliances. If you love werewolf lore, cryptids, book to film adaptation talk, and stories where music is more than a soundtrack, you’ll want to hear this one. Subscribe, share the episode with a friend who loves monster stories, and leave a review telling us who you’d cast as Titus Wolfe. Follow Rick London: Website [https://dancingwolfeman.com/] | Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/RichLondon0/] | X [https://x.com/RickLondon1964] All episodes of the podcast can be found on our website: https://booksvsmovies.buzzsprout.com/share [https://booksvsmovies.buzzsprout.com/share] Connect with me: https://www.instagram.com/rainydayreads2021/Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/booksvsmoviespodcast/]| Threads [https://www.threads.net/@rainydayreads2021] | Bookshop [https://bookshop.org/shop/booksvsmovies] | Goodreads [https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/24006232?ref=nav_profile_l] | Blog [https://lluviareviews.blogspot.com/]

23 Apr 2026 - 31 min
episode Ep. 61 The Idea of You by Robinne Lee vs. The Idea of You (2024) artwork

Ep. 61 The Idea of You by Robinne Lee vs. The Idea of You (2024)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2310476/fan_mail/new] A secret romance with a global pop star sounds like pure escapism until you look at the one detail that changes everything: age. I’m Lluvia, and I’m putting Robinnne Lee’s The Idea of You [https://bookshop.org/a/103238/9781250353078] up against the 2024 Amazon movie adaptation starring Anne Hathaway and Nicholas Galitzine to see which version actually earns the fantasy. I get into spoilers while I break down the biggest book vs movie differences: Izzy’s age and fandom, the Coachella trailer meet-cute versus the Vegas meet and greet, and the film’s crucial choice to age Hayes up from 20 to 24. I also unpack why the novel’s constant reminders about the age gap made me more uncomfortable instead of more convinced, and how the movie shifts the pressure outward into tabloids, sexism, and ageism once the relationship goes viral. Then I talk about the ending change that split fans, plus the adaptation choices that raised my eyebrows, including the “One Direction” blueprint with a more K-pop-coded performance style and the disappointing whitewashing of characters of color. I close with my ratings, why the movie wins for me, and what this story reveals about what makes an age gap romance feel safe, grounded, or exploitative. Subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a rating and review, then tell me: which version of The Idea Of You worked for you? All episodes of the podcast can be found on our website: https://booksvsmovies.buzzsprout.com/share [https://booksvsmovies.buzzsprout.com/share] Connect with me: https://www.instagram.com/rainydayreads2021/Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/booksvsmoviespodcast/]| Threads [https://www.threads.net/@rainydayreads2021] | Bookshop [https://bookshop.org/shop/booksvsmovies] | Goodreads [https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/24006232?ref=nav_profile_l] | Blog [https://lluviareviews.blogspot.com/]

12 Mar 2026 - 1 h 3 min
episode Ep. 60 Lisey's Story by Stephen King vs. Lisey's Story (2021) artwork

Ep. 60 Lisey's Story by Stephen King vs. Lisey's Story (2021)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2310476/fan_mail/new] Grief can make a world feel unreal and sometimes, in Stephen King’s universe, it literally is. I dive into Lisey’s Story [https://bookshop.org/a/103238/9781982147792] and its Apple TV+ adaptation to unpack how a marriage haunted by memory, fame, and a lurking monster transforms once it leaves the page. I trace why the novel centers Lisey’s private mourning and intimate bond with Scott while the series leans into a thriller frame, giving Jim Dooley’s obsession more oxygen and turning the “bool hunt” into a narrative engine with tangible stakes. Along the way, I chart the biggest shifts that change how the story lands: the Long Boy’s evolution from whispered menace to driving force, Booya moon’s travel rules moving from pure will to water-bound ritual, and the starkly different accounts of Scott’s death. I also look at how consolidating Lisey’s sisters sharpens the emotional core, why the miniseries’ closure scene resonates even if its cosmology stays hazy, and how sustained tension makes Dooley’s downfall feel earned. If you’ve ever wondered whether clarity beats ambiguity in supernatural storytelling, this comparison offers a rare side-by-side test. I share the exact moments that swung my verdict, the beats that stumbled (hello, pacing), and the choices that sang, plus a few filming-location Easter eggs (Wave Hill, Journal Square, and the stunning United Palace) for fellow New Yorkers and cinephiles. By the end, you’ll know where each version soars, where it strains, and why the screen adaptation edges out the book for me. Hit play, then tell me your pick: novel or series? If you enjoy these deep dives into book-to-screen changes and how they reshape theme, character, and payoff, follow the show, leave a quick review, and share this episode with a friend who loves a good literary scare. All episodes of the podcast can be found on our website: https://booksvsmovies.buzzsprout.com/share [https://booksvsmovies.buzzsprout.com/share] Connect with me: https://www.instagram.com/rainydayreads2021/Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/booksvsmoviespodcast/]| Threads [https://www.threads.net/@rainydayreads2021] | Bookshop [https://bookshop.org/shop/booksvsmovies] | Goodreads [https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/24006232?ref=nav_profile_l] | Blog [https://lluviareviews.blogspot.com/]

5 Mar 2026 - 38 min
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