Tomi Adeyemi Book Movie Adaptation: Tomi Adeyemi Says She Won’t Watch or Promote the *Children of Blood and Bone* Movie
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The author of one of the most celebrated YA fantasy novels of the last decade has publicly stepped back from its big-screen adaptation, and her reasons go well beyond the usual creative differences.
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Tomi Adeyemi, who wrote *Children of Blood and Bone* and spent years working directly on its film version, recently posted a TikTok video announcing she is “officially separating” her name from the project. She stated plainly that she will not watch the finished film and will not post anything to promote it, citing painful experiences behind the scenes.
More than a disappointed author
What makes Adeyemi’s statement unusually significant is how deeply embedded she was in the production. She is credited as a co-writer on the screenplay alongside director Gina Prince-Bythewood and holds an executive producer title. This was not a situation where a studio optioned a book, quietly sidelined the author, and delivered something unrecognizable. Adeyemi was in the room. That she is now publicly distancing herself from the result carries a different weight than the standard author-versus-Hollywood grievance.
She has not gone into specific detail about what happened, keeping her public comments measured. Her TikTok post read, in part: “There is a reason I will not post anything about the adaptation of my work. That’s all.” She also confirmed she has not seen the film and does not plan to.
A star-studded film still heading to theaters
None of this appears to have slowed Paramount’s plans. *Children of Blood and Bone* is scheduled for release on January 15, 2027, and the studio has assembled a cast that would turn heads for any project. Thuso Mbedu and Amandla Stenberg lead the film, with Damson Idris, Tosin Cole, Viola Davis, Idris Elba, Cynthia Erivo, Lashana Lynch, Chiwetel Ejiofor, and Regina King rounding out the ensemble.
The 2018 novel, which drew on West African mythology to tell the story of a young girl trying to restore magic to a world where it has been violently suppressed, became a publishing phenomenon. It debuted at number one on the New York Times bestseller list and was praised for centering a Black protagonist in a genre that had long struggled with representation.
What this means for the film’s reception
Adeyemi’s public separation from the project puts audiences in an unusual position. The movie arrives with extraordinary talent both in front of and behind the camera, and the source material has a devoted readership. But the author’s silence is its own kind of signal, and fans of the book will likely head into theaters with that context in mind.
Whether the film can stand on its own terms, separate from the circumstances surrounding it, is a question January 2027 will answer.
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