K Let's Talk
In this episode, I’m diving into one of my favorite adaptation choices in Heated Rivalry. When adapting this novel for television, Jacob Tierney decided to expand the role of Svetlana, and that decision not only created another dynamic character for audiences to enjoy but also helped to externalize Ilya Rosanov as a character. In the novel, so much of Ilya’s characterization lives internally through POV and narration. But television doesn’t work that way. It has to externalize emotion through his relationships, behavior, and visual storytelling. Through three key scenes ( the Tuna Melt conversation, the Russian monologue, and the cottage scene in the finale) I explore how the show uses Svetlana as a storytelling device that helps us to understand Ilya’s internal world, and forces him to confront his feelings for Shane head-on. This episode will draw some book vs screen comparisons and also dive into the craft of adaptation itself. I've long said that Heated Rivalry's success comes from how Jacob chose to translate the internal storytelling of the source material, so let's chat about how he accomplished that for television audiences, shall we?
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