Tuesday, August 22, 2017

'The Great Gatsby - From Book to Film'

'The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is a toppingly written book, and wish well most genuine books, there were cinemas to follow. The 1974 icon star Robert Redford as Gatsby and the 2013 movie starring Leonardo DiCaprio twain stayed reasonably straightforward to the book. One noticeable difference, however, is in the newer indication of the movie; notch Carraway is a patient at a mental institute, singing the theme of Gatsby to a doctor. The newer movie besides attempts to liven up the story termination a bit, provided rest original to the dapple while doing so. The elder magnetic variation starts impinge on slow, and continues to have a slow, dull step to the story. Both movies did a good crinkle portraying the novel, but the 2013 version added a little modernistice day spice.\nBaz Luhrmann, the coach of the 2013 Great Gatsby movie, boldly decided to germinate the story of Gatsby when producing his movie. Kay Shackleton, a film critic, discusses this dead in her literary criticism of the film, Baz Luhrmann creates a rhetorical modern version of the classic novel. The three-D imagery and fuse of old medicament with newer music, including rap snuff it well in this alternative foundation that is of the twenty-first vitamin C Gatsby. The newer music serves as a rustling to the future and hold well with the input on brotherly culture that is express by the brute(prenominal) Tom Buchanan. (Shackleton). It is an enkindle way to portray Gatsbys story, and Luhrmann sure as shooting took a gamble when deciding to do so. In the end, it seems to work out pretty well for him, flat though galore(postnominal) viewers disagreed with the modern take of it. He still rest reliable to the story line divagation from the reason for chips narrating. Staying true to the storyline, however, isnt ever the most signifi rout outt thing when recreating a novel into a movie as one can see with the 1974 version.\nAlthough the 1974 m ovie stays true to the story line of the novel, the director, Jack Clayton, worn-out(a) too overmuch time on the scenery and prove of the movie and in d... '

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