Tennessee Williams’s A Streetcar Named Desire and
Elia Kazan’s film version of the play share the same characters and the same story. Except for the opening scene, Kazan doesn’t change the plot at all. To emphasize the meanings of death and desire, the movie shows Blanche taking different streetcars in the area surrounding where Stanley and Stella live—and the viewer can imagine how difficult it is for
Blanche to adjust. In the play, Blanche simply talks about the streetcars, which puts the audience right into a situation without any introduction. The setting is also the same—and hardly changes—in the movie. Kazan tried to make the movie follow the stage directions as closely as possible. …show more content…
The music gives the audience the right feeling about Blanche and the difference in age between her and the boy. In the play, it’s difficult to create an atmosphere of the scene when the stage directions indicate, “The music of the
Four Deuces is played.” What kind of music do they play in the
HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON
Comparing a Play and a Film
Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved.
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CONCLUSION
Restatement of thesis Closing statement Four Deuces? The stage directions obviously lack some extremely important details because a blue and sad music can be almost any type of music, and it’s impossible to hear it radiating from a book.
Elia Kazan’s film version of A Streetcar Named Desire is interesting, but in some scenes a little confusing to those who have read the play. The benefits of film techniques entertain the audience even more and emphasize the dramatic situations between the characters. While the plot of the movie hardly differs from that of the play and the changes in the theme do not affect the plot much, the audience won’t miss a lot if they would rather watch the movie instead of reading or going to see the original play at a