Professor Thomas 2/20/2012 Dracula: A better read‚ or a better movie? Since the beginning of the moving picture‚ directors have been recreating books into movie. More often than not‚ the directors will change the original plot line of the book. In Bram Stoker’s Dracula the director changes the plot in a few different instances but for the most part‚ the director keeps the same plotline. Some similarities between the book and the movie are: the genre and setting‚ loss of personal power‚ and the gothic
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personal experience can be viewed in two novels written by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley‚ Frankenstein and Mathilda. Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley lives through her writings breathing through each character; one can place themselves into the world of Shelley through these novels. To be able to understand her we will view a glimpse of her life. Mary Wollstonecraft was born August 30‚ 1979. She already had shoes to fill as her parents were Mary Wollstonecraft‚ an advocate for women’s rights and William
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Usually‚ when a movie is made about a story in a book or a play‚ the two stories are not exactly the same. The movie tends to add small details or leave some out in order to meet time limits and to make the story what they think will be more interesting. Such is the case with Shakespeare’s Hamlet. The movie starring Mel Gibson and Glenn Close left out and even added things that were not originally in the play. When Shakespeare wrote Hamlet he did not write in a scene depicting the funeral
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alike. In the movie Hercules compared to the myth Hercules there are many differences. In the book‚ Apollo and Hercules have a quarrel about Hercules taking the oracle for himself and Apollo would not let that happen‚ however; this was not mentioned in the book. Within the book‚ Hercules got so angry at the sun for being too hot‚ that he shot the sun with an arrow‚ yet; it was failed to be reffered to in the movie. In the movie‚ Hercules was born atop Mt. Olympus‚ although; in the book‚ it mentions
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“When I stepped out into the bright sunlight from the darkness of the movie house‚ I had only two things on my mind: Paul Newman and a ride home.” In The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton‚ Ponyboy is not the ordinary fourteen- year- old boy for he is a greaser‚ a poor person known to be a public disgrace from the East side of town. All of his life he has been living as a nothing compared to the Socs‚ the rich kids from the West-side. He doesn’t know if he should be proud of who he is until his entire world
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of parents want their kids to read the book then watch the movie. But why? If you read the book‚ you have an image in your head of what the character looks like‚ what their voices sound like‚ and what the scene looks like‚ and usually it is pretty good. But when you watch the movie‚ all those images get shattered. When you read a book‚ there may be parts of the book that you really like that you would like at see on the TV screen. But then‚ when the movie finally comes out‚ the part you like isn’t
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inside all people: the dark side of the nature of society that is not embedded deep inside the unconscious‚ but visible by observant eyes‚ keen to defy that which‚ in hindsight‚ is marked with suspicion and disapproval. Authors Mary Wollstonecraft and Mary Godwin Shelley serve the role of inquisitive minds‚ subtly or undeniably exposing the hard truths of a time period in
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Robert Deniro’s full version of Frankenstein I could easily tell from the couple clips we watched it looks quite different. I am a film major and I know what decisions are probably involved in changing some of the scenes for visual effects. Sometimes things on a page will not read as well when they are presented on screen. In this short paper I will concentrate on why they may have changed certain details for the screen. First of all‚ the laboratory scene. In the book we never really see or hear of
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Beowulf‚ the warrior who fought bravely against monsters. In the Beowulf movie and poem‚ there are similarities and differences in the comportment of a hero‚ gender roles‚ and in the role of religion‚ which reveal themes that reflect both Anglo Saxon and modern societies. The first example of the similarities and differences in the poem and the movie is the comportment or behavior of the hero. In both the poem and movie‚ the hero who is Beowulf‚ acts very
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over the change around them‚ which can apply to Mary Shelley’s characters in her novel Frankenstein. While the 3rd stanza doesn’t apply to the monster as much as Frankenstein‚ someone can still connect it to both characters. One example is in the first line of the stanza when the poem states‚ “We rest- a dream has power to poison sleep.” This refers to Frankenstein’s constant nightmares through the novel; for example in chapter 5 page 51 Frankenstein states‚ “I slept‚ indeed‚ but I was disturbed by
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