Based upon Donna Tartt's novel which won the Pulitzer Prize. The book is a coming of age tale told from the perspective of Theodore Decker who survives a terrorist attack at an art museum.
Footage was shown at Cinemacon on the 2nd and some are saying the adaptation looks like it'll be faithful to the book.
It's probably one of my favorite books of all time so I hope the film delivers.
Footage was shown at Cinemacon on the 2nd and some are saying the adaptation looks like it'll be faithful to the book.
https://www.indiewire.com/2019/04/the-g ... 202055470/It’s not that Donna Tartt’s Pulitzer Prize-winning 2014 novel “The Goldfinch” is unfilmable, but it’s more a question of, well, who would want to? Tartt’s time- and place-spanning epic ostensibly follows one spectacularly ill-fated boy (or is he?) across a tragic childhood and into an adulthood marked by love, loss, and a little bit of classic art theft. It’s wonderful on the page, but it’s also meaty, dense, twisty, and complicated. In short, tough stuff for a 120-minute runtime.
And yet “Brooklyn” and “Boy A” filmmaker John Crowley took on the task of turning it into a feature film, another complex adaptation for a director who excels at them. Bolstered by a script from Peter Straughan and featuring a stacked cast that includes Ansel Elgort as lead Theo, Oakes Fegley as the younger version of him, Sarah Paulson, Nicole Kidman, Finn Wolfhard, Luke Wilson, Aneurin Barnard, Jeffrey Wright, Ashleigh Cummings, Denis O’Hare, and Willa Fitzgerald, a first look at the final film promised a real treat for book lovers.
It's probably one of my favorite books of all time so I hope the film delivers.