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La Belle Et La Bete Comparison

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La Belle Et La Bete Comparison
Widely regarded as one of Disney’s more recognised films, the 1991 film version of Beauty and the beast, produced by Walt Disney Pictures, is based on the French fairy tale where a beautiful woman falls deeply in love with a beast. The original, La Belle et la Bete was published in 1740 by Madame de Villeneuve, however, was then edited and rewritten by Madame Leprince de Beaumont in 1757. The tale has gone through many varied and imaginative incarnations, however, it still remains persistent with the themes of envy unrewarded, learning to love what may at first appear as a ‘beast’ and the benefits which virtue and selflessness will give on the individual (Pook Press, 2017).

All stories require certain features or components to serve a purpose (Angela Janovsky, 2017). The story element known as Characters is crucial for audiences to understand the plot as well as the authors motifs, also the relationships characters’ hold is also important to clarify a story. Furthermore, the protagonist in the Beauty and the Beast, Belle/Beauty, is similar in both the original text and film versions of the story. However, the relationships she has with the men in the tale do differ between the two versions. In addition, the relationship shared between Belle/Beauty and the Beast is
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In the original version the entire story can be seen as much more calculated and deliberate, within the relationship between Belle/Beauty and the Beast, whereas the film version is a more straightforward story (Okapina, 2011). The adapted version of the original text allows the audience to understand the storyline, in which was written in 1740. As the film is presented in a modernised way it may be easier for individuals to understand the original story through the dialogue

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