The best option would be to film the majority of the footage in Japan meaning either sourcing the entire crew from there or having translators etc. Therefore the cast would need to be of Asian decent yet be able to speak English (to appeal to a Western audience) and the scenery of Japan is difficult to recreate in studios. There is also the fact that though the book never states that it is in Japan, it is hard to ignore the similarities. There are also quite a number of stunts, SFX and fight scenes in the book which means expensive rigs, lots of insurance, choreographers, armorers, training for cast and preferably multi-camera takes. There would be many difficulties in the attempt to create Across the Nightingale Floor for example it is a period piece and by nature period films need a lot more time, research and funding. I chose this work to conduct the first few steps of a mock-adaptation as it is not only a fantastic story but one that has the potential to translate well to film. The story centers around the life of the main protagonist Takeo (known at the beginning of the book as Tomasu) and is characterised by many traits from Japan’s past (customs, samurai, ninjas, clothing, food, feudal hierarchy etc).įor a full plot summary please click here. It is an action/fantasy story set on a set of islands which closely resemble feudal Japan. Across the Nightingale Floor is the first book in the trilogy know as Tales of the Otori written by English born Australian writer, Lian Hearn (real name Gillian Rubinstein).
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