My final is about the difference between the book and the movie “The Outsiders.” This next paragraph is about the description difference between the book and movie. Then the paragraph after that will be about the description of the background or cars that the characters drive or live in. I think that the move and the book where basted of the same story but I think that when the directors made the movie with some different cars or house that can change the movie or they put different things in it so that the movie will look better. Altogether the movie and the book were pretty good and had good meaning to it about want to think of life and it’s alright to not be tough and hard.
The general plot was of course the same, but there was also how Montag’s opinion of the society changed over the course of the movie. Clarisse’s character was majorly changed throughout the movie compared to the book. This was because she never died in the movie when “"No. The same girl.
(Pg 26). Then the time changes to the past, Martin is confused about where he is, then Martin gets sent away by a tidal wave where he gets saved by a girl with bright red plaits, which is where he meets Meg and is able to learn where he is and what’s it's like to live in Meg’s life and what she's been
The plot of the novel That was then, This is now in my own words is very interesting. Mark and Bryon are such good friend they present each other as brothers. Mark got really jealous when Bryon started dating Cathy, so he started selling drugs and making himself look like a fool. Later on after Charlie died in a shooting while saving Mark and Bryon, Cathy’s little brother M&M went missing. He had ran away.
In A Wrinkle In Time by Madeleine L’engle, there are many differences between the novel and the movie version. Even though there are many differences, there are also many similarities from the two. However, in the movie there are many more differences in characters and relationships, plot sequencing, and details compared to the book version. For example, how the book begins with Meg up in the attic scared to death, because of all the raining and thundering and the possible tornado.
After President Franklin D. Roosevelt passed away in 1945, Harry S. Truman became president of the United States. President Franklin D. Roosevelt was a peacemaker whereas President Truman was a vengeful diplomat. Needless to say, it was President Harry S. Truman who threatened Japan with atomic attacks. Soon after he ordered the United States weapon program to release a bomb in Hiroshima, and three days later in Nagasaki.
A drastic choice is whether or not to stab someone in the eye with a butter knife. In the book Divergent by Veronica Roth, someone was stabbed in the eye. In the movie based off the book, this scene wasn’t even shown. There are some differences between the book and the movie. Stabbing someone in the eye with a butter knife was just one of the many changes made.
It is crazy to think how pop culture can point to the things it works so hard to reject, but in the case of Divergent by Veronica Roth, parallels between it and the gospel abound. Divergent is set in a dystopian Chicago in which the citizens are divided into 5 factions; the brave, the selfless, the intelligent, the honest and the kind. The story follows Tris Prior, a sixteen year old girl who realizes her Divergence, or possession of characteristics of more than one faction. The novel and film adaption of Divergent include many similarities to the gospel, notably the emphasis on a choice of commitment, the concept that we need more than one characteristic to grow, that salvation is brought about through sacrifice, and that humankind is at its heart, evil.
Stephen King, a famous writer once said, “Books and movies are like apples and oranges. They are both fruit, but they taste completely different.” Truly, this applies to all movies and books. This quote is effective describing the novel and the movie, A Raisin in the Sun. Although the two share similar scenes and acts, the movie shows a lot more details which make it better.
When comparing a story to a film, there are three ways that they can be translated. These translations can be a literal translation, traditional translation or radical translation. The literal translation can be defined as, "reproduces the plot and all its attending details as closely as possible to the letter of the book" (Cahir, 16). The traditional translation can be defined as, " maintains the overall traits of the book (its plot, setting, and stylistic conversations) but revamps details in those particular ways that the filmmakers see necessary and fitting" (Cahir, 16-17). A radical translation can be defined as one, "which reshapes the book in extreme revolutionary ways both as a means of interpreting the literature and of making the
When it comes to film adaptations of books most have differences that don’t go along with the book for the sake of the movie’s time, production, etc. One of these examples is the film adaptation of Veronica Roth’s Divergent. Many differences are seen between the book and the film. The images on the screen and my personal interpretation of the setting have minor differences.
Concepts that entice the audience, events that show the supremacy and authority good has over evil, and a story that exhibits the true power and capability of love, “A Wrinkle in Time.” The main premise of the novel, a “Wrinkle in Time” is apropos a girl, named Meg, who despite her faults, anger, impatience, and lack of self-confidence, uses the power of love to disenthrall and free her brother, Charles Wallace, from the malevolent IT. As portrayed in the past movie productions, the modus operandi is to alter the novel, which thereby condenses the film to retain the attention span of the audience. In respect to the motion picture, “A Wrinkle in Time,” abundant has changed. The setting has been more modernized as opposed to anachronistic
In all movie adaptations, there must be some change to make it function like a movie. This is evident when discussing the play, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and its 1958 counterpart of the same name. Both are similar in terms of plot, characters, and setting. Despite this, some key plot points were changed when the movie was made that differ from the play. These points change the storyline dramatically.
Do you read the book and compare it to the movie, or do you watch the movie and compare it to the book? I have read and watched Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone more times than I can count. The book allows you to accomplish your creative side and use your imagination to feel the places as well as the scenes. You can develop an image in your mind of what you predict a character will look like and how they will sound. There is no dissatisfactory acting so you can imagine it the way you want, anywhere you want.
The Notebook The well known romantic story, “The Notebook,” written by the novelist, Nicholas Sparks, portrays two people falling in love during the 1940s. The book was written in 1996 and the movie was released in 2004. Nicholas Sparks was inspired by a real life couple and that is why the movie is so realistic. The main characters Noah Calhoun and Allie Hamilton are played by popular young actors, Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams. Though the book and movie are based on the same love story, they have many differences, some minor and some major.