You might not guess it by looking at "Twilight" or "The Hunger Games," but YA adaptations are in a bad way. That's because nearly every attempt to capitalize off of the popularity of the book genre — "Beautiful Creatures," "The Host" and "The Mortal Instruments" being the prime examples — have failed spectacularly.
While book sales figures are notorious difficult to find without subscriptions to the right services, it's worth noting that "Divergent" has been atop the New York Times Children's Series chart since early November. "Beautiful Creatures" and "The Mortal Instruments" topped the chart much closer to their respective release dates and hung on for between one and three months, before handing the spot back over to "The Hunger Games."
Veronica Roth's book certainly has enough eyes on it to guarantee a success in the eyes of analysts, but the real question is whether it can take off to become something much more cultural impactful.
Then, there's Shailene Woodley, the actress that seems destined for the kind of attention Jennifer Lawrence was getting last year. Like the "Hunger Games" star, Woodley has made a name for herself by gaining serious indie cred before moving onto the franchise material.
The conditions are right, in a way that it wasn't true for Lily Collins or Alice Englert, for Woodley to jettison into the A-list. Both "Twilight" and "The Hunger Games" got a boost from their star power, and "Divergent could get the same.
Ultimately, it's up to whether non-YA readers want to see Shailene Woodley and Mr. Pamuk bring down a society divided into personality traits, and we'll find out this weekend when "Divergent" opens in theaters.
via MTV News
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