Like, say, Alfred Bester? The Demolished Man? The Stars My Destination?
I actually have an old paperback edition of The Demolished Man that says "Soon to Be a Major Motion Picture." This would been around around 1980 . . . so I've only been waiting for the movie for twenty-plus years!
I think
The Stars My Destination would be a great movie. But for some reason I can't see
The Demolished Man as a major motion picture. When I read it, the adaptation in my head was closer to an old episode of
The Outer Limits or
The Twilight Zone. Maybe that's because it's much more of an internal story.
The Stars My Destination has just the right amount of epic visuals to be appropriately translatable.
The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress is another book I think would make a great movie. The difficulty with that one would be the almost constant use of low-gravity effects. I think they might be better off trying to realize this one as a photo-realistic CGI film in the vein of Robert Zemeckis'
Beowulf.
My all-time favorite novel would have to be Neil Gaiman's
American Gods. (I've read it twice and I never reread fiction.) It's epic, a bit sprawling, but thoroughly filmable, particularly considering it's a fantasy set almost entirely in modern day America. And they must, absolutely MUST cast Brian Cox as Mr. Wednesday. No one else oozes friendly, casual menace the way he can. I'm a bit more flexible with Shadow, although I'm picturing someone in the vein of Christian Bale, Russell Crowe, Hugh Jackman, or Sam Worthington.
BTW, for further fantasizing about adapting books into movies or mini-series, I recommend the website
http://storycasting.com .
A couple of coming of age fantasies I'd like to see adapted:
The Dark Glory War by Michael Stackpole &
The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss.
It's still not too late for Lucy Lawless & Renee O'Connor to do a big screen
Xena movie.
I'd like to see another CGI
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movie.
And call me crazy but I'd like to see Ben Affleck & Jon Favreau come back for
Daredevil II.
The Seven-Per-Cent Solution - another, much more book-faithful adaptation.
Oddly enough, the screenplay was itself written by Nicholas Meyer. But then, it wouldn't be the 1st time a novelist missed the mark with his own adaptation. Ayn Rand's screenplay for
The Fountainhead seems to totally miss the point of her own book.
A sequel to Super Mario Bros.
I think its time has passed but I would have been very happy with this back in the 1990s.