Thursday, April 18, 2013
Challenges in Adapting a Book Into a Movie
Adapting a book into a film seems like a challenge, but a challenge I woud love to take on. In the book, The Help, there are many scenes that a movie would have to include in order for the film to have the same affect as the book. The one that sticks out the most is when Mister Johnny finds Minny cleaning his home. His wife had been hiding the fact that she had hired a maid in order to make it look like she knew how to run a home. The showed well minny's fears as well as what might actually happen is a white man had found a random black woman in his home during that time period. You really get to know Minny as a character and how she would react in a given senerio. Another scene I would have to keep is when Miss. Skeeter goes on a date with the very arogant bachlor. It gives great insight into Miss. Skeeters struggles and how she is different than many of the young women from her time period. The last scene that I think is vital in making a successful movie would be when Skeeter asks Minny to be the main character in her book she is about to begin writing about 'the help'. This is a scene that also shows Minny's attitude toward her job, her place in society and white women. I think there are also parts that could be felt out of the movie such as when Minny gets yelled at by Mister Johnny's wife. It doesn't have anything to do with the story and I think there are already enough examples of Minny being mistreated. You could also leave out the part about the help raising people's children and how the children they raise end up hiring them as 'the help'. It's also an unneeded detail that does not need addressed as much as it is.
Friday, April 5, 2013
Book Project 1
Book Project 1- Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar
Children trip to Wales!
Jacob Portman couldn’t
get enough of Wales, old homes and solving the death of his beloved
grandfather. And now you, the fans of Ransom Riggs novel summer novel can
experience the suspense and discovery for yourself. An exclusive trip to Wales
includes an eerie tour of the children’s mansion, a travel through the time
loop and a chance to meet see Miss. Peregrine in her bird form.
In Miss. Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children Jacob Portman
discovers and old abandoned, destroyed mansion that he eventually find out,
contained his grandfather at one time. A
fter intense exploration and
unknown time travel, Jacob stumbles upon the children and Miss. Peregrine
herself. The amazing place of Wales offers the reader the chance to personally
experience what weather, city and lifestyle that Jacob was exposed too. “Fog
closed around us like a blindfold. When the captain announced that we were
nearly there, at first I thought he was kidding; all I could see from the
ferry’s rolling deck was an endless curtain of gray. I clutched the rail and
stared into the green waves…” (Page 66).
One of the last expeditions that
will be offered to the fans will be a chance to solve the murder at the bay
themselves. The hunt will take them to different places around Wales like the
bar/hotel that Jacob and his father were staying at as well as the bog which
Jacob is forced to run through multiple times in the novel. "I could feel the bog sucking me down with it. The more I struggled, the more it seemed to want me. What a strange find the two of us would make a thousand years form now, I thought, perserved together in the past," (Page 303).
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
What Is A Book?
A book is map. Books teach you lessons, show you how
to live and sometimes, show you how not to live. But all of this knowledge is
gained from the words, not from the illustrations or the thread that went into
sewing both covers onto the front and back of the pages. I agree with Joe Meno
when he says that the book is more important than the actual form it takes.
There have always been words but they have constantly changed the way in which
they are displayed. For example, people used to write down important
information onto stone tablets, then animal hide and now paper. I think the
next step in this line of change is to view the words from a computer screen.
Do I personally think that reading off a computer screen is the most
comfortable way to view something? Absolutely not, but it’s the way that
technology is heading. And it has been proven in the past that no one can slow
or stop technology form advancing. I enjoy leafing through the brilliantly
colored books at Barnes and Noble just as much as anyone else. I enjoy sitting
down in a big comfy chair with a warm latte and reading all afternoon, looking
up 3 hours later with ink on my fingers. But if technology is changing that
experience for people, then I don’t feel like I can do anything to stop it.
Soon there might not be a Barnes and Noble down the street that I can browse
through. Said? Yes for me it is, but I can’t really do anything about it. I
also strongly agreed with Victor LaValle when he makes the point that we
worship the actual physical book too much. It’s not the hardback cover that we
pawn over so heavily, it’s the message inside that kept us turning the pages at
2am. The message is what needs to be ‘worshiped’ or appreciated, not the
physicality of the novel.
Why Do We Read?
Why do we read? We read to imagine. We read to
learn. We all read for different reasons yet we all gain the same thing from
reading, new knowledge. I’m not an avid reader but I do enjoy the task. Some of
the favorites include The Great Gatsby and The Wettest County In America. I
learned something new from each book. For example, in The Great Gatsby I
learned about relationships and about solid writing. The author worded his
sentences in such a way that you felt like you were standing right where the
character was. I don’t say this very often because I’m a movie lover but Great
Gatsby is one of those books that could never be fully represented in a film
setting. The vocabulary and sentence structure is just too vivid to put into
film. From reading The Wettest County In America I learned about our country’s
past. I learned about the moonshine industry and how much turmoil it brought
throughout America. I learned about sibling relationships and the battle
between good and evil. These books both stand out in my mind and mean something
to me. We read to learn and we write to express.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)


