Prime Video has an incredible Philip K. Dick adaptation, which adapts one of the most acclaimed books written by the author. Yet, despite delivering a unique take on the book, the show remains under-appreciated.
Philip K. Dick remains one of the most influential sci-fi writers of all time. Owing to this, it is not surprising that his books and stories are often picked up for movie and TV adaptations. Even one of the greatest sci-fi franchises of all time, Blade Runner, was inspired by Philip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep.
Surprisingly, though, among all these adaptations, the one Prime Video sci-fi show seems far more overlooked and less talked about despite having a solid Rotten Tomatoes score of 84%.
Man In The High Castle Adapts Philip K. Dick’s Hugo Award-Winning Book Of The Same Name
Created by Frank Spotnitz, The Man in the High Castle is based on Philip K. Dick’s book of the same name. The book was first published in 1962, and, at its core, unfolds in a world where the Axis powers won World War II. Philip K. Dick primarily drew inspiration from Ward Moore’s Bring The Jubillee and a Chinese book titled, I Ching, when he wrote The Man in the High Castle.
The book also helped him win the Hugo Award in 1963, and he even planned to follow it up with a sequel. Many attempts were made to bring the book to the screen, but only Prime Video’s show eventually pulled off the feat.
Despite Significantly Changing The Book, Man In The High Castle Proves To Be A Worthy Adaptation
Although Prime Video’s The Man in the High Castle holds a solid Rotten Tomatoes critics’ score of 84%, the show has received significant criticism for drifting too far from its source material. The alternate history sci-fi show not only introduces a bunch of new characters that do not exist in the novel but also changes many original narrative devices and expands its source’s vision to a more global scale.
Despite all the changes, the show is arguably better than the book because, instead of solely focusing on the “feel” of the alternate history from the book, it turns it into a high-stakes Resistance movement. This gives the show a more concrete conflict and storytelling direction.
Philip K. Dick’s prose is also notoriously known for being less about a fixed plot and more about instilling existential paranoia in readers. This makes his books hard to adapt. Prime Video’s The Man in the Castle still finds a way to overcome this by translating Dick’s philosophical unease into visual world-building.
Not all fans of the book will admire the Prime Video show’s approach, but it still works far better than most sci-fi adaptations, which proves it deserves more attention.
This story originally appeared on Screenrant
