^
Narnia and Middle-Earth have both been adapted before, Narnia on TV (I watched those versions quite a bit as a kid) and Middle-Earth as an animated film.
And now I want to read
The Yiddish Policeman's Union.
As well you should, damn good book. Imaginative alternate history, and speaking of those:
Ridley and Tony Scott are busy guys.
This caught my eye:
Wow, they're actually going to tackle that hot potato, huh? I've been wondering if anyone would ever try.
I hope it's not too long a miniseries. The crux of the problem with a
lot of Philip K. Dick adaptions is they're usually adapting material too short for the running time - slapping together short stories into movies, which need a few car chases or explosions or idiotic multiple plot twists to keep the running length appropriately cinematic.
Adapting Dick's novels is wiser because they are by definition longer, but they're not exactly epic tomes - at a random stab I'd say something like four episodes would be more than enough for
The Man in the High Castle, and maybe less.
Fact: The majority of big budget films in the last decade have been remakes, reboots, re-imaginings, prequels, or sequels. This is the safest way of making new big budget movies, financially speaking.
Fact: The majority of big budget films in Hollywood history have been geared towards whatever was considered the safest way to budget them. Ben-Hur has been cited, so consider the heydey of the Biblical films, where numerous movies were based... often on books and plays
about Biblical topics (like
Ben-Hur, but also
The Rope,
Quo Vadis), some of which had been made into films before.
Hollywood's so relentlessly commercial to the point it's been a cliche to knock it decades anyone posting here was born (except for those of you who were birthed in the 1920s, possibly).