Introduction
Friday Night Lights was a movie released in 2004, based on a novel by H. G. Bissinger by the name of Friday Night Lights: A Town, a Team, and a Dream (1990). It aims to document the true story of a high school football team and their coach, residents of the Texas city of Odessa, where the entire city comprises avid followers of the team and the game. Hence, this captivating story recounts the 1988 football season of the Permian High School Team, delving into the unique personalities of the characters, their dynamics, and their pursuit of the championship title.
Similarities between the book and the movie
There are certain ways in which the movie and book are similar. Both profile the economically depressed town of Odessa and the craziness for sports that is prevalent there. When the Permian Panthers play football every Friday night, people forget their miseries and troubles, and this West Texas town becomes a place alive with hopes and dreams, as the tagline aptly puts it, “Hope comes alive on Friday nights.” The deep involvement of the residents with the team and the winning-is-everything attitude is a theme common to the book and movie. The tragic story of Boobie Miles, the team’s star running back who was recruited by all major programs but loses his big chance due to a scrimmage is also focused on in detail in the book as well as the movie. The overall sports hysteria is shared by the book and the movie, but beyond football, both versions of the story also pay attention to the consequences of people’s actions, their choices, and the inevitable ramifications. Since the movie is based on the book which is a real-life account, it is shot in a semi-documentary way which gives it an authentic feel, as the characters or the sport is not overly dramatized, or blown out of proportion for the sake of a big-screen audience. Due to this, both the book and movie succeed in bringing to life the good and bad sides of life and the obsession related to sports.
Differences between the book and the movie
However, several ways differentiate the movie from the book. In the book, Bissinger had bravely tackled several societal issues which were important to truly give a realistic feel of the town. For example, racial conflict, economic problems, and the income and social inequalities between the wealthy citizens as compared to the blue-collar citizens were all discussed in great detail in the book. These things are omitted from the movie. The book had a definite sociological theme as it did not shy away from racial issues, failure, futility, hypocrisy, and displaced priorities where education ranked at the bottom. These concepts are very briefly touched upon in the movie, if at all. For example, racial slurs were mentioned in the dialogue of the book, but not in the movie. Politics was also one of the themes in the background of the story in the book, however, this was deleted from the movie version. In these ways, the tone of the movie differs from that of the book.
Some of the events which occur in the movie are different from the book. Such as in the book, Boobie was badly injured in the scrimmage game, after which he quits the team, much to the disdain of the coach. However, in the movie, he meets the team bus on crutches and rides with them to the state finals. This leads to another difference in the two versions: Permian did not reach the state finals in the book and reality, only to the semi-finals. But in the movie version, it was defeated in the finals. Another aspect that differs is the emphasis on the relationship between the Billingsley father and son, which was not given such an in-depth treatment in the book. Also, the ending of this particular storyline was the opposite in both versions.
Conclusion
In conclusion, while the central theme is common to both the movie and the book, in the execution, a few elements have been added to and deleted from the movie, which reflects the different demands and constraints of the two mediums.