Three Major Differences in the Novel-Great Gatsby

Three Major Differences in the Novel, The Great Gatsby and the A and E Network Movie Version of its Starring SorvinoIntroduction

Compiling a film that is based on an exceedingly literary work that is mainly composed of lines and phrasings of conversations that have been burned forever in the minds of readers is generally a thankless job. Coming up with a film that keeps intact the soul and heart of such literary work together with several of its graceful lines is almost incredible to accomplish. Therefore, the film director Bauz Luhrmann definitely had many hurdles putting together the best lines from descriptive sentences in the novel to come up with ashy script on viewers’ screens. This, however, was neither the best method to make the best of the moments nor to speed up the process of storytelling. The Great Gatsby is clearly and unmistakably Luhrmann’s work and without any iota of doubt, his vision and mission largely rely on the viewer’s broadmindedness of the man’s idea of spectacle. The 3 main differences in the novel and the movie include:

Daisy Buchanan is Not That Innocent

Capturing mass audience for a prolonged period of this scale and size without attempting any manner of sweeping romance can never be possible. Also, serving up Daisy the same way she is depicted in the novel can be equally daunting; she is more hard to fall in love with yet we are very much aware of her real character. However, Daisy doesn’t come out well as a wolf in doe’s attire. She adores and sometimes, really loves Gatsby, though it is a shallow kind of love affair. This is something Mulligan is more compassionate Daisy skirts a bit. Her Daisy appears to be more of a victim of bird cage that is built by her surrounding and not a decent woman whose personality and heart are not as bold as her engrossing personality portrays.

In the novel, this is brought out at Buchanan’s residential home when Daisy visits with her daughter and Gatsby is in attendance. Here, Daisy plays around with the child, makes compliments of how beautiful she is, the n later sends her away with her nanny. Her daughter is not part of her soul, something that most parents find bear and live without. However, the little elf remains her plaything that appears whenever it suits her and returns to her surrogate mother once Daisy is done. Integrating this memorable moment into the movie might have made it utterly unlikable, and this would not have worked out well for Luhrmann and the setup he had chosen of the big moment that when Tom found out Daisy and Gatsby have been smooching in Gatsby’s mansion. Nonetheless, it would have ensured the scene remains far less soapy and true. When Daisy finally admits her love for Gatsby and Tom, Gatsby’s world crumbles because his one true North, Daisy had disappeared. Gatsby fails to believe this and thinks Daisy is not who he has always believed she is. However, before this point and successive scenes where she runs over Myrtle, one cannot clearly figure out who Daisy really is. The novel unfortunately works on it rather quickly.

The Ballad of Daisy and Gatsby is Lacking an Essential Aspect: Capitalism

The point in which Nick clearly describes Daisy and Nick falling in love includes languages that is so financial in nature such that it brings out the truth of Daisy’s role to Gatsby. Wrapped in serious romantic instants of even the slightest graze of her lover’s hand , Nick insinuates that Gatsby took her under false pretense then later says Gatsby had no idea how an extraordinary a nice and pleasant she could be. He suggests he had been company of lesser ladies before and therefore could easily differentiate. Whereas Gatsby winds up in love at the end of the passage, the phrasing is marked with the notion of goods and trading. Gatsby moved up to a rich, stylish and elegant gal that his station could not afford him before. This ambitious and idealistic young man fell in love with a very beautiful girl whom her avenged love would mean for his entire life. He believed he would remain a man worthy of Daisy’s station through association. It by chasing this ambition that Gatsby acquires wealth by using underhand activities. He is actually after success that Daisy represents yet he firmly believes he is after success. He loves the success she represents so much. The film does not bring out Gatsby’s inability to acquire satisfaction after his reunion with Daisy. The permeating question about wealth and the fact that Daisy is just a single run of ladder of Gatsby’s yearn for wealth and success is eclipsed and completely buried by the attractiveness of big screen success.

What Happened to Mr. Gatz?

The film fails to bring out Gatsby’s personal history; emotionally and chronologically. With that in mind, Luhrmann was however somehow wise to downplay the role played by Gatsby’s father, Mr. Gatz. Mr. Gatz spends enough time with Carraway in the early days that followed Gatsby’s murder. In the book, the presence of Gatz makes the degree of Gatsby’s striking to come out clearly, the eventual effort to wrest him from his self-made myth. Whereas Luhrmann makes every frantic effort to bring out the story’s final moments, it was crucially wise to give Gatz a low profile, especially when the filmmaker makes use of the valuable time in refocusing the attention of viewers on Daisy’s daughter, ultimately making the child real.

Conclusion

The Great Gatsby film looked very different both at the very best and ta the very worst. In my own view, when a novel is transposed, it is more interesting than when it is adapted for the screen, when a story is just photographed through contempt due to the cinema’s exceptional gift of expression. Surprisingly, the film turned out that the film is more strikingly and also more slavishly faithful to the novel, among the many literal adaptations that I have ever come across.

0 replies

Leave a Reply

Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!

Leave a Reply