Verne was highly prolific.
Jules Verne bibliographyhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jules_Verne_bibliography Some of those filmed [apart from those mentioned by Prof] are:-
Around the World in Eighty Days
Five Weeks in a Balloon
From the Earth to the Moon
The Mysterious Island
Robur the Conqueror
The Green RayClassics illustrated also did,
Off on a Comet and one listed here as 'the steam house' as
'Tigers and Traitors' Its always been a mystery to me that when there are titles available like,
A floating city
The Underground City; Or, The Black Indies
(Sometimes Called The Child of the Cavern)
Eight Hundred Leagues on the Amazon
The Archipelago on Fire [a recent French comic adaption exists]
The Purchase of the North Pole [third and last Baltimore Gun Club novel]
The Carpathian Castle [ may have inspired Bram Stoker to write Dracula]
An Antarctic Mystery [Response to Poe's 'Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym']
Propeller Island
Master of the World
Invasion of the SeaMany are available on
Project Gutenberg. I'm astounded that film companies have not, to my knowledge, filmed any of these.
It goes without saying that Verne's work has been a hugh influence on comic book scenarios.
so much of it was endless descriptions of sea life and vegetation the travellers saw. It read like a a textbook. The underlying story was rather weak and was buried by the travelogue.
But of course, Verne was writing before TV, Radio and before photographs could be published on printed paper. He introduced the world to places, people, concepts and ideas that were brand new and exotic at that time. And we read the whole story, forgetting that Verne published weekly episodes of serials, a different reading experience entirely.