...the novel is superior to film — Brett
I agree with a lot of what
@Janus has written, so I won't repeat. I have also come to conclusion that because of the nature of what art is, some art forms are just limited in format, regardless of how skilled the artist is.
Art communicates something that's beyond it's physical state. To simplify things let's say that art communicates to our imagination. Well, some art formats present too much direct obvious information which doesn't allow our imagination to work much. Like movie, even more so, photograph. The thing is given to you on a plate. A face, a color, a shade, an angle, a move, a speed, a sound.
That's why a lot of movies move you superficially, as many have experienced, having a great time in cinema and then walking out and forgetting what you were seeing just 15 minutes before. Your mind just didn't work much to get it, and it's out of it. Like what a candy, empty calories, does.
But when you read a novel, you are creating along with it, you are working with it much more. So the experience is much more ingrained in you, deeper, richer. Better.
Of course, there are degrees of quality in any art form. Great movie is better than bad novel. But I would say that great movie cannot be better than great novel, simply due to format constraints.
That's why music is so powerful as an art form, too. It's abstract yet relatable. Our minds have no option but to work with it.
With any art form, a great artist is able to create a product that can dance with your mind in a way to extract the most "imaginative work" out of you, so you get the most ingrained experience. Both artist and you are humans, both of you bleed, dream and die. What best artists are able to do, in a way, is to get closest to the core of what human is within their piece of work, making a piece which ends up communicating with your mind, through your imagination, like a glove to a hand.
Now, as Janus mentions in one of the posts, it's a feedback system of sorts. It is not only about the piece of art, but about your mind that works with it. It does take a certain exposure, certain "training" or "getting used to", certain experience, to be able to receive the art the most. Especially the greatest art, since there's greatest intricacy in it. Probably even an attitude of humbleness to receive is needed. But it's not about intelligence, as I see it.