Altough I have not seen all of 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
Premium
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
Free Hamlet
Monstrosities Where there is so much as a speculation of an abomination‚ there is a society desperately scrambling to reinstate dominance. Society’s fight for supremacy is prevalent in both books‚ Frankenstein by Marie Shelley and Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck. The creature from Frankenstein and Lenny from Of Mice and Men are both mortally wounded from the agonizing blows of society. They share the same cuts and bruises‚ but neither of the characters receives the necessary stitches to help heal
Premium Frankenstein Mary Shelley James Whale
Carol. The reason I liked the DVD better‚ because it goes into more detail than the party does. Also instead of me having to visualize it myself‚ then I can just watch the movie. I also do not like to read if I do not have to. For the people who can’t read‚ the movie is a much better choice for them. In the story and the movie Marley were dead. Scrooge was also very good friends with Marly before he had passed away. Scrooge had also heard voices calling his name‚also the first spirit came to his
Premium
influence of context on Frankenstein and Blade Runner Whilst text may be fictitious constructs of composer’s imaginations‚ they also explore the societal issues of their eras. This is evident in Mary Shelley’s novel‚ Frankenstein‚ which draws upon the rise in scientific knowledge and the Romantic Movement of the 1800’s as well as Ridley Scott’s Film Blade Runner (1992)‚ reflecting the increasing dominance of capitalism in the late 20th century. An excerpt from Frankenstein that demonstrates the
Premium
Ernst Hilaire Bonnie Ronson 3/10/13 Frankenstein The detached head of Elizabeth‚ poorly stitched onto Justine ’s body‚ the Frankenstein monster tucked into it ’s bed clutching onto its Wall Street Journal anxiously terrified for the arrival of it ’s new bride. Burning the flesh in the flames of a broken lamp covered in kerosene of the second monster after it ’s suicide. Inga and Frederick making love on the slab where the monster was born. These scenes‚ all while conducting similar objects
Premium Frankenstein Young Frankenstein
August 2014 Comparison of East of Eden and Frankenstein with the Book of Genesis The basic story ideas in the Book of Genesis could be found in every novel written if one looks deep enough for them. However‚ in John Steinbeck’s East of Eden and Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein‚ the similarities are very prominent and easy to connect with the biblical tales. Many of the characters have similar personalities and are named in a similar fashion or with a certain prophecy in mind. Steinbeck’s novel is specifically
Premium Book of Genesis Adam and Eve Cain and Abel
In the summer of 1966‚ the first Batman movie debuted. Starring Adam West as Batman/Bruce Wayne and Burt Ward as Robin/Dick Grayson‚ this movie defines comic book satire. To summarize the movie‚ “The plot revolves around the usual improbable scientific device that‚ in the wrong hands‚ could take over the world. Here it’s a ‘total dehydrator’ that sucks all the water
Premium Batman Superhero Superman
A movie the calibre of The Shawshank Redemption only comes along once in a long time. The acting and story stand out in the mind of many critics as the best of all time. The novella written by Stephen King is what the movie was based upon and they are quite similar. Although there are similarities‚ the movie captivates and grabs the viewer as opposed to the novella‚ which seems to drag on a bit. Darabont’s adaptation of Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption turns an average novella into a theatrical
Premium The Shawshank Redemption Morgan Freeman 67th Academy Awards
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
Premium Dracula Bram Stoker Film