African Film and Literature: Adapting Violence to the Screen (Film and Culture Series)
Lindiwe Dovey
Create Your Own Mobile-Friendly Online Store: Add a Free Shopping Cart to Web Pages that Adapt to Screen Size
Annette Godtland
[(African Film and Literature: Adapting Violence to the Screen)] [Author: Lindiwe Dovey] published on (April, 2009)
Unknown Author
Operation Tigerhunt ǀ A gripping international spy thriller ǀ Soon to be adapted on screen
Siddhartha Thorat
Operation Tigerhunt ǀ A gripping international spy thriller ǀ Soon to be adapted on screen
Siddhartha Thorat
Adapting Henry James to the Screen: Gender, Fiction, and Film
Laurence Raw
Adapting Nathaniel Hawthorne to the Screen: Forging New Worlds
Laurence Raw
Book to Screen: How to Adapt Your Novel Into a Screenplay
Frank Catalano
Adapting Science Fiction to Television: Small Screen, Expanded Universe
Max Sexton
Women Adapting: Bringing Three Serials of the Roaring Twenties to Stage and Screen (Studies Theatre Hist & Culture)
Bethany Wood
ORIGINAL PATENT APPLICATION NUMBER 15,052 FOR IMPROVEMENTS RELATING TO FIRE SCREENS AND BLOWERS ALSO ADAPTED FOR USE AS A PEDESTAL FOR SUPPORTING JARDINIERES AND OTHER ARTICLES (LONDON).
Ruth. Menzies
Screen Adaptation - Beyond the Basics: How to Adapt Books, Comics, News and Real Life Stories Into Award-Winning Screenplays
Eric R. Williams
Adapting American Drama to Film. The Transfer From Stage To Screen Of "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" by Edward Albee
Katie Eaker
15 Brick Stitch Beading Patterns: The Patterns Have Been Adapted To Work On Black And White Screens
Mickey Visher
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. A novel by C. Landery adapted from Frank Capra's Columbia picture, story by Lewis R. Foster, screen play by Sidney Buchman. With illustrations
Unknown Author
[(Book to Screen: How to Adapt Your Novel Into a Screenplay)] [Author: Frank Catalano] published on (November, 2014)
Unknown Author
Adapting Endings from Book to Screen: Last Pages, Last Shots
Armelle Parey