Kazuo Ishiguro's simple prose has made his books particularly adaptable to cinema, as seen in successful films like The Remains of the Day and Never Let Me Go. His 1982 debut novel A Pale View of Hills arrives in cinemas on March 13, 2026, as a hushed tale of buried secrets spanning 1980s England and postwar Nagasaki. The author, despite aiming for unfilmable stories, continues to see his works translated effectively to the screen.
Kazuo Ishiguro once stated, “I try to write unfilmable novels,” yet his efforts have repeatedly succeeded on screen. His Booker Prize-winning novel The Remains of the Day became a Bafta award-winning film in 1993, featuring Anthony Hopkins as the butler Stevens and Emma Thompson as Miss Kenton. Similarly, the 2010 adaptation of Never Let Me Go starred Carey Mulligan as Kathy, transforming Ishiguro's sci-fi tale into an acclaimed thriller.
The upcoming A Pale View of Hills, based on Ishiguro's 1982 debut, enters cinemas on March 13, 2026. The story follows a middle-aged mother in 1980s England confronted by her daughter about her past in Japan, weaving themes of buried secrets and unreliable narration. It shifts between postwar Nagasaki and contemporary England, evoking a ghost story atmosphere with elements like a locked bedroom door.
Other Ishiguro adaptations face delays: Taika Waititi's version of Klara and the Sun, starring Jenna Ortega, has stalled, while Guillermo del Toro's stop-motion take on The Buried Giant is just beginning production. Ishiguro, a cinephile who received an Oscar nomination for writing the 2022 film Living—a remake of Akira Kurosawa's 1952 Ikiru—recently praised films including Justine Triet's Anatomy of a Fall (2023), del Toro's Frankenstein (2025), and Gints Zilbalodis's Flow (2024).
Born in Nagasaki and raised in Surrey after moving as a child, Ishiguro began with songwriting before turning to fiction. His unadorned style, akin to genre writers like Raymond Chandler or John le Carré, facilitates cinematic translation by focusing on emotional mysteries rather than flashy prose. As he views his novels as campfire tales that evolve in retelling, adaptations allow his stories multiple lives, much like the parallel narratives in A Pale View of Hills where the mother crafts an alternative account to distance the truth.