In my personal opinion, The Great Gatsby novel is a great book because of the significant ways it presents the flaws of society during that time period. The book is sensibly written, but the narrator is somehow unreliable & most of the novel's characters are easily repulsive because of the way they act and how they play along with certain issues. On the other hand, the movie adaptation emphasized on some of the major themes like hope and the corruption of the upper class - however it lacked the symbolization of colors and a bit of the important scenes that can be seen from the book got cut off. Even though there were major differences between the novel and the movie, the themes of the corruption of the American Dream and the Lack of morals …show more content…
This scene clearly doesn’t occur in the book but the narrative convention did highlight, as well as support one of the major themes in the book which is the corruption of the American Dream. Nick moved to New York City hoping for a better life and future all by himself through the medium of being involved in the stock market: “… so I decided to go East and learn the bond business. Everybody I knew was in the bond business, so I supposed it could support one more single man” (Fitzgerald 3), in the movie however, instead of attaining his goal in the end due to what happened to Gatsby and all the other erratic events involved, Nick unfortunately ends up in a mental …show more content…
A prime example of that is Nick; in the novel, he is portrayed like an upright man as he specifically commended: “I have been drunk twice in my life, and the second time was that afternoon” (Fitzgerald 29), this shows that he doesn’t enjoy drinking and celebrating parties in comparison to way that he said that he’s only been drunk twice in his lifetime. Nonetheless, the movie suggested that he’s not the kind of person that everybody expected seeing that he enjoyed all the parties that he went to & surprisingly lacked a little bit of control on his simultaneous actions. Intrinsically, the movie placed insistence on Nick’s life unlike the person shown in the book. Another character who is different apart from Nick is Jordan; almost from the start of the movie, we immediately learn that Jordan Baker is an athlete. Her entire character development was precipitated, along with her dubious relationship with Nick when they were both in Gatsby’s party: “Her grey, sun-strained eyes stared straight ahead, but she had deliberately shifted our relations, and for a moment I thought I loved her” (Fitzgerald 58). In the novel, the both of them seem to have an occasional endearment with each other, eminently she is demonstrated to be deceptive. However in the film, Jordan was an unreadable character that people may never know massed information about