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Books into film and television
- The Face
- From the 1985 novel The Face by Mark and Marvin Werlin
- The Face on the milk carton
- From the novel The Face on the milk carton by Caroline B. Cooney
- Factotum
- Charles Bukowski's 1975 novel is an autobiographical tale based on his own days of drifting and drinking from job to job. It's Bukowski's usual slant on the other side of the American dream and the film version, by Norwegian director Bent Hamer, has a cast including Matt Dillon, Marisa Tomei, Lili Taylor and Fisher Stevens.
Read the Book ~ About the Film
- Fahrenheit 451
- From the novel Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
- Fair game
- From the 1978 novel A Running duck by Paula Gosling
- Faithful
- From the 1985 play The Flatbush faithful by Chazz Palminteri
- The Falcon and the Snowman
- From the 1979 book The Falcon and the Snowman by Robert Lindsey
- Fallen Curtain
- From the short story Fallen Curtain by Ruth Rendell in the volume of same name
- The Fallen idol
- From the novella The Basement room by Graham Greene. In The third man, and, The fallen idol
- Falling for a dancer
- From the 1993 novel Falling for a dancer by Deirdre Purcell
- Family album
- From the novel Family album by Danielle Steel
- Family blessings
- From the 1993 novel Family blessings by LaVyrle Spencer
- Family money
- From the novel Family money by Nina Bawden
- Family of strangers
- Based on the 1976 book Jody by Jerry Hulse
- Family pictures
- From the novel Family pictures by Sue Miller
- Family plot
- From the 1972 novel The Rainbird pattern by Victor Canning
- Fantastic Four
- From the comic Fantastic Four by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
- A Far off place
- From the novels A Far off place and A Story like the wind by Laurens van der Post
- Farewell my lovely
- From the 1940 novel Farewell my lovely by Raymond Chandler
Fast food nation
- Eric Schlosser’s 1991 book, an attack on the power of the fast food industry
in America and what the consumption of its dubious products do to the insides
(and outsides) of the nation, is coming to the screen as a fictionalised drama
rather than a straight documentary. Richard Linklater directs and the producers
are English: Jeremy Thomas and the former Sex Pistols impresario Malcolm McPherson.
It was filmed in some secrecy and even under another title so that the fast
food people wouldn’t cotton on. It’s an ensemble cast led by Catalina Sandino
Moreno, the actress from Maria full of grace, including Greg Kinnear,
Patricia Arquette, Avril Lavigne, Bobby Cannavale, Kris Kristofferson, Esai
Morales, Ashley Johnson and Ethan Hawke.
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the Film
- Father of the bride
- From the 1948 novel Father of the bride by Edward Streeter
- Father's doing fine
- From the 1948 play Little lambs eat ivy by Noel Langley
- The favourite game (2002)
- From the 1963 novel The favourite game by Leonard Cohen
- Fear and loathing in Las Vegas
- From the book Fear and loathing in Las Vegas by Hunter S. Thompson
- Fearless
- From the novel Fearless by Rafael Yglesias
- The Feast of All Saints
- From the 1991 novel The Feast of All Saints by Anne Rice
- The Feast of July
- From the novel The Feast of July by H. E. Bates
- The feast of the goat / La Fiesta del chivo
- Mario Vargas Llosa's novel, first published in English translation in 2001, is set during the last days of the brutal rule of Dominican dictator General Rafael Trujillo. The novel is about a woman who returns to her native Dominica to find the corrupt cabal around Trujillo includes her own father. Luis Llosa, who is the cousin of the Peruvian novelist, is directing a large scale international production with a cast including Isabella Rossellini, John Hurt, Jordi Molla and Tomas Milian.
Read the Book ~ About the Film
- The feast of love
- Robert Benton, who directed previous literary adaptations such as Kramer vs Kramer, Billy Bathgate, Nobody’s fool and The human stain is making this adaptation of Charles Baxter’s 2000 novel. The novel is an interesting literary work which features a writer named Charles Baxter who’s having trouble writing his latest book. He goes into a local coffee shop where the owner tells him he should call his book The feast of love, the title of a painting which hangs in the shop, depicting a sunlit table on which dishes, cups and glasses “seemed to be tipped towards the viewer, as if all this light, and all this food, and all this love, was about to slide into our laps, The feast of love was the feast of light, and it was about to become ours.” From there on the novel moves to a whole cast of characters who reveal the whole concept in their lives. The main roles are taken by Morgan Freeman and Greg Kinnear with Radha Mitchell, Jane Alexander, Selma Blair, Fred Ward, Alexa Davalos and Billy Burke leading a large supporting cast.
Read the Book ~ About the Film
- Feather boy (2004)
- From the 2002 novel Feather boy by Nicky Singer
- Felicia's journey
- From the novel Felicia's journey by William Trevor
- Female perversions
- From the 1991 non-fiction book Female perversions by Louise J. Kaplan.
- Ferngully, The Last rainforest
- From the 1991 children's novel Ferngully by Diana Young
- Fever pitch
- From the book Fever pitch by Nick Hornby
- A Few good men
- From the play A Few good men by Aaron Sorkin, originally produced in 1989
- Ffolkes
- Based on the 1979 novel Esther, Ruth and Jennifer by Jack Davies
- Fidel
- Based on two books: the 1993 book Fidel Castro by Robert E. Quirk and the 1991 book Guerilla prince by Georgie Anne Geyer
- The Field
- From the 1965 play The Field by John B. Keane
- Field of dreams
- From the 1982 novel Shoeless Joe by W. P. Kinsella
- Fierce people
- An adaptation of the 2002 novel by Dirk Wittenborn that had among its acknowledgements the sometime actor and film director Griffin Dunne. Dunne has ended up directing the film which has been adapted by Wittenborn himself. It's a black comedy about a fifteen year old (played by Anton Yelchin) who lives with his erratic drug addled mother (Diane Lane). She gets a job as a masseur to an elderly billionaire (Donald Sutherland) who lives on a vast estate in a community where everyone is richer than most people could imagine. What happens to him amongst these often obnoxious people is the subject of this clever and witty novel, some of which is based on the adolescence of the author.
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- Fiesta
- From the 1971 French novel Fiesta by Jose Luis De Vilallonga
- Fifty Ways of Saying Fabulous
- Central Otago, the picturesque setting of the recent film of In my father's den, was the location for this adaptation of Graeme Aitken's 1995 novel. It's the story of 12 year old Billy, the only son of a farmer and a boy out of step with the rugby playing world of his peers. Imagining he's the daughter from the television show Lost in space and making a wig out of a cow's tail is not conventional behaviour on an Otago farm. The film version is directed by Stewart Main with 13 year old Auckland actor Andrew Patterson as Billy, Harriet Beattie, also 13, as his best friend Lou, Michael Dorman and Rima Te Wiata.
Read the Book ~ About the Film
- Fight club
- From the 1996 novel Fight club by Chuck Palahniuk
- The Final cut
- From the novel The Final cut by Michael Dobbs
- Final descent
- From the 1991 novel The Glass cockpit by Robert P. Davis
- Finding Neverland (2004)
- From the play, first performed 1997, The man who was Peter Pan by Allan Knee
- Fingersmith (2005)
- From the 2002 novel by Fingersmith by Sarah Waters
- The Firm
- From the novel The Firm by John Grisham
- Fire in the sky
- From the 1978 book The Walton experience by Travis Walton
- First blood
- From the 1972 novel First blood by David Morrell
- Five children and It (2005)
- From the 1902 novel Five children and It by E. Nesbit
- The First wives club
- From the novel The First wives club by Olivia Goldsmith
- Five are together again
- From the novel Five are together again by Enid Blyton
- Five go down to the sea
- From the novel Five go down to the sea by Enid Blyton
- Five have a wonderful time
- From the novel Five have a wonderful time by Enid Blyton
- Flags of our fathers
- James Bradley’s 2000 book, a big bestseller in America, is about the Battle of Iwo Jima, the decisive 1945 battle that marked a turning point in World War II. It is most famous for the iconic photograph of American servicemen raising the U.S. flag on Mt. Suriback, the highest point on the Japanese island of Iwo Jima. The film is Clint Eastwood’s directorial follow up to Million dollar baby and it has a largely young case headed by Paul Walker, Ryan Phillippe, Adam Beach and Jesse Bradford.
Read the Book ~ About the Film
- Flaming star
- From the 1958 novel Flaming lance by Clair Huffaker
- Flicka
- The 1941 classic by Mary O’Hara became a famous Hollywood film in the 1943 with the late Roddy McDowall. The new version is described as a reinterpretation and deals with a girl (Alison Lohman) who cares for a wild horse to prove that she is responsible enough to inherit the family ranch from her father (country star Tim McGraw). Maria Bello and Dallas Roberts also star.
Read the Book ~ About the Film
- Flight of the intruder
- From the 1986 novel Flight of the intruder by Stephen Coonts
- The flight of the Phoenix
- Elleston Trevor's 1964 novel was made into a movie in 1965 with James Stewart, Peter Finch and Richard Attenborough. It's about a cargo passenger plane which crashes in the desert and how the survivors cope and then rebuild the plane. The remake shifts the setting from the Sahara to Mongolia's Gobi Desert. The main actors are Dennis Quaid, Giovanni Ribisi and Dennis Quaid but they've added a woman (Miranda Otto) and a rap star (Sticky Fingaz).
Read the Book ~ About the Film
- The Florentine
- From a play The Florentine by Damien Gray and Tom Benson
- Fluke
- From the 1978 novel Fluke by James Herbert
- The Fly
- From the famous short story The Fly by George Langelaan. In the collection No, but I saw the movie
- Fly away home
- From the book Father Goose by Bill Lishman
- Follow me boys
- Based on the 1954 novel God and my country by Mackinlay Kantor
- Follow the stars home
- From the 2000 novel Follow the stars home by Luanne Rice
- Folly to be wise
- From the 1944 play It depends what you mean by James Bridie
- Fools of fortune
- From the novel Fools of fortune by William Trevor
- For love of the game
- From the 1991 novel For love of the game by Michael Shaara
- For whom the bell tolls
- From the novel For whom the bell tolls by Ernest Hemingway
- For your eyes only
- From the novel For your eyes only by Ian Fleming
- Forbidden
- From the 1982 book Last Jews in Berlin by Leonard Gross
- Forbidden Planet
- Suggested by the Shakespeare play The Tempest
- The Foreign student
- From the novel The Foreign student by Philippe Labro, first translated 1988
- Forrest Gump
- From the novel Forrest Gump by Winston Groom
- The Forsyte saga (2002)
- The first series is based on the first two novels - The man of property (1906) and In chancery (1920) of the Forsyte series by John Galsworthy
- 48 Shades of Brown (2006)
- From the YA novel 48 Shades of Brown by Nick Earls
- The Fountainhead (1949)
- From the 1943 novel The fountainhead by Ayn Rand
- The Four diamonds
- From a short story The Four diamonds by Christopher Millord
- The Four feathers
- Based on the 1902 novel The Four feathers by A. E. W. Mason
- Foxfire
- From the 1993 novel Foxfire by Joyce Carol Oates
- Fracture
- The second adaptation of a Maurice Gee novel to appear in 2004. This one is an adaptation of his 1994 novel Crime story. It's a grim story that follows a botched burglary and shows the effect on both the criminal and the victim. Larry Parr directs a cast that includes Jared Turner as the criminal, Kate Elliott as his solo mother sister, Michael Hurst, Cliff Curtis, Alistair Browning, Liddy Holloway and Jennifer Ward-Lealand.
Read the Book ~ About the Film
- Frankenstein - The Real story
- From the novel Frankenstein or The Modern Prometheus by Mary Shelley
- Frankie and Johnny
- From the play Frankie and Johnny at the Clair De Lune by Terrence McNally
- Freaks
- Based on the short story Spurs by Tod Robbins. In the volume No, but I saw the movie
- Freaky Friday
- From the 1972 novel Freaky Friday by Mary Rodgers
- Free Jack
- From the 1959 novella Immortality Inc by Robert Sheckley. In the Robert Sheckley Omnibus
- Freedomland
- Richard Price's 1998 novel is a powerful tale that tackles race. It's about a white woman who claims her car has been hijacked by a black man with her young son in the back seat. The police investigation has to navigate dangerous territory in a city where racial tension is already a strong reality. The film version, with screenplay by Price, has a strong cast led by Samuel L. Jackson, Julianne Moore, Ron Eldard and Edie Falco.
Read the Book ~ About the Film
- Freedom Writers
- From the 1999 book The Freedom Writers Diary by Erin Gruwell
- Frenzy
- From the 1966 novel Goodbye Piccadilly, Farewell Leicester Square by Arthur La Bern
- Fresh Horses
- From the 1986 play Fresh Horses by Larry Ketron
- Friday night lights (2005)
- From the 1991 book Friday night lights by Buzz Bissinger
- Fried green tomatoes
- From the novel Fried green tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe by Fannie Flagg
- Friendly fire
- From the 1976 book Friendly fire by C. D. B. Bryan
- From hell
- From the 1999 graphic novel From hell by Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell
- From hell to Texas
- From the 1957 novel The Hell bent kid by Charles O. Locke
- From Russia with love
- From Ian Fleming's novel From Russia with love
- From the mixed up files of Mrs Basil E. Frankweiler
- From the 1968 novel From the mixed up files of Mrs Basil E. Frankweiler by E.L. Konigsburg
- Frontier Marshal
- From the 1931 novel Wyatt Earp: Frontier Marshal by Stuart N. Lake
- Frontier of dreams (2005)
-
Tie-in book to the television series by Bronwyn Dalley & Gavin McLean
- The fugitive kind (1960)
- From the 1957 play Orpheus descending by Tennessee Williams
- Fugitive nights
- From the novel Fugitive nights by Joseph Wambaugh
- Full circle
-
Tie-in book by Michael Palin
- Full circle
- From the novel Full circle by Danielle Steel
- Fun
- Based on a play Fun by James Bosley
- Funny farm
- From the 1985 novel Funny farm by Jay Cronley