What is Wrong with the Wheel of Time?
I’m not a “hater.”
Putting that out there for anybody taking all of five seconds to conclude that I’m one of those people who expect screen adaptations to exactly reflect the beloved books upon which they are based in every single detail… well, I’m not. Far from it, in fact. I desperately wanted to love the long-awaited TV adaptation of Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time, but after watching several episodes, the disappointment has built up to an uncomfortable level where I feel I must vent, even if that gains me the label of “disgruntled reader.”
As a writer and producer with experience of the creative industries, I know very well that adapting a text to a different medium comes with an acknowledgement that what you are doing is, after all, an adaptation. Modifications — and compromises — are clearly at the heart of this process.
But modifications should be made with purpose. Change for the sake of change is simply destructive, and the choices you make early on are paramount to how the plot — especially such a devilishly intricate one as Jordan weaves in the WoT — can develop at later stages. And this is where the Wheel of Time has epically failed.
First, though, let’s give credit where it is due: The series has got two things spectacularly right: Costume design and diversity of casting.