THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO The Adaptation A

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2) Johnnv Got H-is Ggu by D. Trunbo. 3) Black ... 2) Second and third rate literature nakes a better filn than first rate ...... Johnny Got His Gun (videorecording).
THE UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGO

The Adaptation o f Literature to Filn: A Comparison o f One to the Other.

A THESIS/PAPERSUBMITTEDTO

THE FACULTYOF THE GRADUATETIBRARY SCHOOL IN CANDIDACYFOR THE DEGREEOF MASTEROF ARTS

BY Janes P. Snith (ADVISOR: Betsy Hearne; Written

CHICAGO,ILLINOIS AUGUST1988

for

LIBSCI 400)

Contents: I. Introduction and background I{hy adapt literature to filn? To advance the reading of literature; and to give filn sone class. II. Theory on the perception of filn inages. Retained inage; literary tropes; visual tropes; zoetrope. I ) linguistic film analysis 2) Literary filn analysis 3) Sign systen filn analysis 4) Sort through the resulting confusion; recognize and accept the differences of the nedia III. History of conparison of filns fron books. Two views: 1) pro-book 2) pro-filn IV. What happens to literature when it takes the forn of filn? V. Sonetimes adaptation works: Five exanples of good films fron I iterature: 1) The Treasure of the Sierra Madre by B. Traven and J. Huston 2) Johnnv Got H-is Ggu by D. Trunbo 3) Black Stallion by W. Farley and Zoetrope Co. 4) Wher.e the Wild*Things Are by M. Sendak and Weston Woods 5) Snow White by W. Disney and Faerie Tale Theatre Sonetines adaptation fails: Exanples of bad filns from good books: 1) A book filmed six tines: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn positive and negative reviews 2) Where the Wild Things Are by the BBC 3) Bible by J. Huston VII. Theory for these failures and successes: 1) Author of book writes screen adaptation or gives other input 2) Second and third rate literature nakes a better filn than first rate I iterature. VIII. How does it feel to sell your book-child to the book-rapist filnnakers? An article on the results of questionnaire to authors of books which have been adapted. Ken Kesey quotes, and rebuttal. IX. FiIn adaptations of literature continues: new Pecos "B1II. X. Sunnary and conclusion Books and film each have their neritsr &nd the media are not freely interchangeable. One nust view each adaptation on itts own nerits. The point is: Film is film and literature is literature. - and film However, if your goal is to further the cause of literature adaptation encourages reading! then filn should be used to further that end.

The noving picture for

approximately

ninety

is a story years.

century film.

Filn

Irron the beginning'

film

responsibilities "

trivialities.

Sinyard

legacy

said

in lifur-ing_lrlerelUl'e,

of the 19th century

was recognized as a revolutionary the methods of literary

the new nedia were proposed:

tedious

nediun which has been in existence

novel

of story

art.

itself."

telling,

reporting

tll

nediun which would predictions

Sone lofty

was to free the "novelist

Filn

the

is the 20th

in a very real sense is a form of literature

serve to change forever for

Neil

"The

Afl--sf--Ssrg-en lklat)tation:

telling

fron the

observations,

and

L21

The adaptation

of literature

the comnercial novie theater.

to film

began soon after

lrlaking filns

the introduction

is a practice

based on literature

which has a history

nearly

itself

nakers saw the novel as a source of raw material.

because filn

as long as the existence

of

of the nedium of filn In

t3l

Francet in the year 1899, George Melies presented & seven minute film adaptation

of the fairy

famous "Trip

tale

Cinderella.

to the Moon" on the science fiction

the United States'

in 1903, theatrical

old in 1903 when Edwin S. Porter

I

Later,

Sinyard, NeiI.

Irtelies was to base his more works of Jules Vern. t41

novie exhibition

was just

produced a twelve minute filn

FilminH Literature,

the Art

seven years

adaptation

of Screen Adaptation.

York: $t. Martin's Press, 1986. Pg. vii. 2

rbid.

3 Bluestone, George. Nsvelslllte-Idu. 1957. Pg. vII. 4 Boyun, Joy Gould. Qqq!.Ie ExposUf@. A m e r i c a nL i b r a r y , 1 9 8 5 . P g . 3 .

In

Bartinrore: Johns Hopkins Press, New York: New

of

.Unsle--Ierds-eebia. t51 A wide range of uses beyond mere entertainnent filns

based on literature.

reading

of literature,

one's goals are to pronote literature

If

and one recognizes

necessary to get people reading to filn

would certainly

Adaptation of literature order

to supply

"motion pictures

t?l

"borrow a bit

of the (original)

Iiterary

And adapting

and evaluation

Because adaptation

filn with

classics

has been t6l

a nuch-needed source of plots

and

novel to the screen also

workts quality

and stature."

t81

in

serves to

The

to the original

based on literature

for

as long as

process.

Regardless of the notive source naterial,

for

the adaptation

In 1988 lihs_pefCgled-Bpger Roger*Bsbhit

of literature

with a needed "blood transfusion"

the classic

of filns

and the

to the masses."

works upon which they are based has been a practice

the adaptation

filns

then the adaptation

of the literary

characters."

conparison

literature,

supplies

for

the need to use whatever methods are

serve your purpose.

as an "introduction

justified

have been pronoted

the novie,

based on literature

filn's

heavy dependence upon literature

of literature

Rabbit

to film

continues

the book by Gary Wolf,

by Touchstone Pictures.

day:

became l{ho Franed

Estinates

vary by year of production

to this

for

fron

of the percentage of thirty

percent

to

5 Kauffnann, Stanley, and Bruce Henstell (ed.). A8erica*nFilm Criticism. flaq__t_he"Begi:nings Lo Citiaeg Kane:. Beviews of SiEnificant FiIns at the, Tine NewYork: tiveright, 19'12. Pg. 4. Ihev*jirgl lpgeg[ed. 6 Miller' Gabriel. ScrqeninE the Novel. Rediscovered Anerica.n_Fiction In h-In. NewYork: Frederick Ungar Publishing Co., 1980. Pg. 95. 7 W e i n b e r g , H e r m a nG . . " N o v e l I n t o F i l n r " L i t e r a t u r e / F i l m Q u a t e r l y . Spring 1973. Pg. 99. 8 Boyun, Joy Gould. Double Exposure: Fiction American Library, 1985. Pg. 4.

Into [i-!n.

New Vork: New

t:2,

well

percent.

over fifty In order

with

to better

an exanination

project

of novenent.

principal

than the duration

of novement. was printed

the principle It

consisted

were a series viewed through

of vertical the slots,

Of the nany theories point:

linguistics,

Linguistic involves

of a circular for

exposure, the retina 1/t0

lantern"

of

of a second longer

device of the 1800's to produce the illusion

of vision

strip

of paper on the inside a horse and jockey.

instance,

cut into

of paper.

the strip

of which There

When rotated

and

the horse appeared to gallop. of film

analysis,

sign systen,

analysis

of filn

are worthy of note at this

conparison.

assunes a linguistic

The linguistic

as there are language "tropes"

three

and Iiterary

the conparison of the linguistic

nature of literature.

defined

of,

is based on

tgl

of persistence

slots

nove; they only

After

approximately

contact.

pictures

individual

inage."

toy or "nagic

a visual

really

one should begin

The novenent a viewer perceives

known as "retained

of the actual

A "zoetropel'was which utilized

Itlovies dontt

the inage of a picture

the eye retains

process,

the adaptation

of the nediun.

an illusion

an optical

understand

nodel for

nature of fitn

school of film

there are visuar

film

to the linguistic

study proposes that

"tropes."

t10l

by Funk and Wagnalls in the New Conprehensive International

st_t,hs Eggligh*lsnguege as:

and

"Trope (n. ) 1 The figurative

A trope

just is

Dictionary

use of a word.

Z

I Ross, Harris. Filn as Literature, Literature as Filn: an Introduction to eUd'B_i&,fi_Sgr-aBbX-_aL_f-ilgj-g&Igtisnship t_o titerature. New york: Greenwood Press, 198?. Pg. 14. 10 Bluestone, 0eorge. 1957. Ps. 22-3,

Novels Into Filn.

Baltinore:

Johns Hopkins Press,

Loosely and less properly'

a figure

speech in gener&l."

of speech; figurative

t11l It tropes

would then follow through

film

achieves a social

to produce cinenatic

nakers use editing

the use of -irp-nfs--sen!reg!.

in lbe*Plonot.er, Chell'

that

triunph

"When Alec

For exanple:

by dancing with

the filur cuts to a shot of greasy seusage frying

nakers arso use Baxqlle]-€d,illng "A wife,

exanple: willing

lover.

advances to his secretary. " The sign system of filn

shows an office

scarcely

be distinguished

The stimuli physical

11

interpretation

conceptual

For

with a

where the husband is naking

assunes there

is a "difference

feelings,

concepts,

images evoked by verbal

stinuli

can

in the end from those evoked by nonverbal stinuli.

spatial

characteristics

ensemble which is consciousness."

into

images of things,

and become conponents of

[14]

is the statenent: feelings

NeruqMal--Diqt_i_onary NewJersey: Publishers International

12 Bluestone, George. N o v e l s I n t o F i l n . 1957. Pg.25. 13 rbid. Ps.22.

"Word

symbols must be

and concepts through the process of

Funk and Wagnalls.

Lngtieh_languege. 1346.

14 Ibid.

[12]

t lf1

Key to the sign systen theory translated

is

' whether they be the signs of language or the sense data of the

wor1d, lose their

the total

tropes.

is seen flirting

between kinds of images--between images of things, words--we nay observe that

It

dingy Kitchen."

to produce cinematic

to make her husband jealous,

The next edit

the Countess of

in a skillet.

the next day and...mother is preparing his meal in their "Film

Guinness,

Baltimore:

of the Press, 1982.

Pg.

Johns Hopkins Press,

thought.

l{here the moving picture

Ianguage must be filtered

cones to us directly

through

through

the screen of conceptual

perception,

apprehension."

t151 The literary

sehool of filn

between the two nedia. "conparison

of filn "A

statement: the addition

Calvin

literary

"nost

of filn

"The

[16] warna:

"There

as a sign systen.

as 1915 filn

are better

kaleidoscopic

adaptation

ways of stocking

junble

nust be qualified

of unrelated

amusementor instruction

"Filn

is linear,

a

The Use of Language Based

examples of applying

In analyzing

linguistics

and

to consider

analogies between sign

of the analogies." net with

resistance

fron

the mind than by flashing infornation.

which nerely

with

"nost of the time."

these nodels can lead to a failure

systens one nust not become prisoner As early

by adding:

that

For an exanple, the

of the tine. " And the statenent:

nodels suggest that

the conplexity

of cliches."

in "The Film Metaphor Metaphor;

Studyr"

difference

leads to the criticism

a novel is narrativer"

nust also be qualified

Pryluck

Models in Filn

is full

is narrative,

of:

recognizes little

This over sinplification

and literature

filn

novel is linear"

interpretation

Sluts

gone educators: before

the eye a

There is danger in any form of the nind."

[17]

Gerald Peary expressed the opposing view in the Classic

the Upules when he wrote:

"According to this view, the filn

rock botton, as a sub-art,

a plaything for idiot

Anerican

Novel and

nedium began at

savant wizards and tinker

toy

15 lbid. Pg. 23. 16 Pryluck, Calvin. "Filn Metaphor lletaphor: The Use of Language-Based Models in Filn Study," Literature Filn Quarterlv, 3t2, S p r i n g 1 9 7 5 . P g . 1 2 3 . 17 Hitchcock, Alfred M.. The EnEIish Journal.

"The

Relation

of the Picture

(4) 1el5. Pe. 298.

Play to Literature,"

technologists,

zoetrope to kinetoscope."

and always has been a nore conplicated people concede. " novel and film

represent

other as ballet out that for

Peary reninds

a pudding. "'

still

"

'is

"The end products

said:

Literature,

noticed

a "necessity

to denonstrate

by instantly

expressing a preference

He found "alnost

unbelievably

reactionary

widely persist

and filn

fron the linguistic

"The

attitudes

across the whole education spectrum."

is visual,

is adapted to filn?

changes are inevitable

mediun to the visual

canera makes space pliable. enabled it

mediun.

camer& does not see things

over

[21J is

the noment one switches

"Even immobilized,

effects."

as the eye does.

print

Because the novel

The canera can nove, and it's

to achieve unprecedented visual

for

his or

to the media which

nobility

the has

l22l

lens of the canera replaces the eye of the observerr"

(but)..the

With the mind, the eye is able to

18 Peary, Gerald, and Roger Skatzkin (ed.). New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing llSlfies. Ibid.

fron each

than is the recipe

credentials

linguistic

of

And "Margaret Kennedy points

t19l

no more a work of literature

What happens to a novel when it

19

nediun than most

genres, as different

aesthetic

is

t2O1

Sinyard in Filming

filn.

different

Bluestone

is fron architectur....."

screen writing

her cultural

and nulti-layered

us that

addst "Film

Peary further

[181

.0 Co, t977.

*!he Pg. 2.

Pg. 4,

20 Bluestone, George. 1957. Pg. 35.

NqY*ejs Inlp-Eilm.

Baltimore:

Johns Hopkins Press,

2 1 S i n y a r d , N e i I . F i I n i n E L i t e r a t u r e , t h e A r t o f $Srp-gn.ldaptation. York: St. Martin's Press, 1986. Pg. 99. 22 Bluestone, George. 1957. P9.15.

-!{Brelglpt*q__filU.

Baltinore:

Johns Hopkins Press,

points

select

of interest

The basic first

the camera wourd soullessly

ideas and vision

of the filnr are contained

the scope of the novel has to be reduced.

can not fit

into

ninety

ninutes

of film,

the inclusion

of a clear-cut

beginning,

in ideological

content

Third, is

mother becones a single

need for

the filn

addition

of sone sort of a "qualitative

to at least

benefits "There

is the addition

niddle,

introduced,

Alex's

editing

once said:

and end.

in order to reflect

Slalliqn'

response theory."

experiences,

and controlled based."

...Viewers by a prior

are

And usually current

it

is a

trends,

a

For example, in the EIeSk_

parent in the film.

equal the quality

Finally,

the

of the book suggests the

judgenent."

I2bl to as

A personts response to a book is based on "past

personal associations,

preconceptions.

the

of melodrana;

One should also keep in mind what Boyum in Double Exposure refers "Reader

But

I24l

which happens to the novel

happy ending which is added. shift

director,

But -e]LefybedJ can rewrite."

The second thing

in the novel.

Five hundred pages of novel

Sometines this

Robert Senglaubr a very wise filn

very few writers.

[29]

The experience of reading most

novels is longer than viewing nost filns. story.

record,"

culturar

biases and aesthetic

response to a gliven filn response to the literary

He found "biases that..,often

was so frequently work on which that

skewed perception

and interfered

preceded filn

was

with

23 rbid. 24 Sinyard, Neil. York: St. Martin's

FilninE Literature, the Art Press, 1986. Pg. 134.

25 Peary, Gerald, and Roger Skatzkin (ed,). UoU11jCC.New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing

of Screen Adaptation.

New

Ql,assic Anerican Novel and the Co, 1977. pg. ?-8.

appreciation. " Sinyard'

t26l

in Filning go for

are the ones that text...use(ing)

Literature, the spirit

rather

the canera to interpret

screen and hope to present

hin entirely

public knewhin...."

naterial. fact'

I try

"I

don't

I feel

than the letter

seek to interpret,

for

illustrate

any one character

as the novelist

of the the tale."

from page to

created

him or as the

with John Huston, Film Quarterly,

to be as faithful

the fascination

screen adaptations

t28l

In Gideon Bachmannts interview 1965, Huston said:

"great

and not sinply

"you cannot transpose

[27] orne reflects,

novelist's

suggested that

to put my own stanp on the

to the original the original

FaIl

naterial

as I can....In

nakes me want to nake it

into

film. " Censorship is another factor "Moral

to consider when the process of literature

adaptation

is analyzed.

content. "

[29] Censorship consists

control

Production Code of 1934 (and others),

has continually

of the Catholic

altered

filnic

Legion of Decency, the

and an "Unwritten

Code" of

self-censorship. There is also a forn of nonetary control. true

that

"the American filn

In a large part

because it

began as a gadget and ended as a billion

26 Boyun, Joy Gould. Double Exposure: Fiction Into FiIn. A m e r i c a nL i b r a r y , 1 9 8 5 . P g . x i .

29 Ibid.

Pg. 36.

L0

Baltinore:

dollar

NewYork: New

27 Sinyard, Neil. Filning_[.!!ere!ur_e.-_thq_A1!__st_SgresnldgB!A!ia[. York: St. Martin's Press, 1986. Pg. x. 28 Bluestone, George. Novels Ints*Film. 1957. Ps. 23,

is

New

Johns Hopkins Press,

a

investment."

Producers seek to linit

on film

production

even larger insufficient

But conpared with

has shown that

film

econonic backs are against -Warner Brothers,

have to be sold to make

that

rules

the decision

production

production

studios

in their

is a need with

expenses involved.

in filn

the waII.

invested

there

literature,

receipts

the anounts of noney involved history

the capital

audience due to the greater box office

an appeal to a

by insuring

investnent

adaptation.

noney.

investnent

sale to return

Books need a large production.

to this

the risk

Irlany thousands of novie tickets

broad audience base. a return

in a filn

Large anounts of money are invested

t30]

of

process. Because of that

only take risks

will

an

is a fear

So it

is no surprise

it

for

film

when their

For exanple:

on the verge of bankruptcy,

released the first

"talkie"

the Jagr_*rgirrEgr. -The Suprene Court ruling forced filn

studios

with competition television

to divest

theater

their

in the early

30 rbid.

Pg. 6.

31 rbid.

Pg. 38

This decision

of connercial

conbined

broadcast

1950's spurred the wide-screen and the stereoscopic

classics

and seni-classics

as source naterial

to the Legion of Decency's canpaign against

in the 1940's and 50's.

How have filned

of trade

restraint

t3tl

-The use of literary be traced directly

holdings.

introduction

by the successful

(3-D) innovations.

filns

in the 1950's regarding

adaptations

3 2 B l o c k , Maxine. "Filns Feb. 1936. Pg. 394.

vulgarity

could in

t32l been used in the past to justify

their

Adapted Fron Published Worksr" Wilson Bulletin.

11

existence

and further

the needs of education

Maxine Block suggested' reader interest

and literary

in 1936, using publicity

with exhibits

filns

history,

costumes, and biography of the period."

which nay be used with

In 1975 Arbuthnot difficulty

is that

children

if

wrote

the filn

a story,

technique

where a fifth

tells

the play of their grade teacher

of dranatic

the books and other

and Sutherland

which restricts

generated by filns

of material...stills

selected

appreciation?

in Children

material

set is

own imagination. "

shows the first

half

their

She has the children

own ending. Then she restarts

filn.

t33l

Here film

retell

the projector

is used to interest

"The

induced in a

of an ..haunting"

the story

and finishes

a class

such as

They relate

"exquisite...beautiful..brilliant...colorful...superlative. and stops the projector.

monents in

and Books:

a nental

to "reap

in other

film,

and provide showing the

areas, nyths and

Iegends. On the other end of the filn Beverly

Cleary who reports,

to read because they can't children

"I

application

to literary

have met nany teachers

inagine

dontt

is

like

For

nedia may be an introduction

t34l "When

Boyunr in Double Exposure, said:

33 Arbuthnot, May Hill and Zena Sutherland. I I . : S c o t t F o r e s n a na n d C o . , 1 9 ' 1 2 . P g . 1 5 2 . 34 Roback, Diane. 26, 1986. Pg. 34.

who say kids

what is happening in the story.

who are unaccustoned to reading...other

to the world of reading."

education spectrun

"Tuning in Children's

t2

filn

is nade of a novel it

Children

and Books.

Books," Fublishers

tends

Glenview,

l{eek.!y.

Sept.

to encourage reading, lf-tSrAtUfe,

rather

wrote that

thoughtful

attenpt

audience. "

[36]

than discourage."

adapting

films

to nake classic

fron

"nobody

loves adaptation,

Not literary

not cinematic

enough in that

pictures,

Sometimes the adaptation discussion

nore accessible

found "biases

by the literary

[3?]

enough in that has its

it

Ihe _T-feqCUIe ofjtre_€:.e.ffa"l{edfe

gold.

for

Early

The following

is a novel

written

in the story,

your character

was before...."

the old and wise character

says:

entirely. t38l

and fascinating,

"Gold is a very devilish When you have it

your soul

It

is an adventure

Sinyard,

Neil.

fron his

Filming

Literature.

37 Bo;run, Joy Gould. DSlblg_ExBq@, A m e r i c a nL i b r a r y , 1 9 8 5 . P g . i x .

story lust

The N,IJiues

" Howard (played

by Walter

sort of thing.., is no longer

35 Boyum, Joy Gould. DpLbIe_EJBgSUIe.i*EiSlig!_tUle__8ilm. Anerican Library, 1985. Pg. 15. 36

literature.

it

changes

the same as

Gold prospecting is hard and dangerous work.

York: St. Martin's Press, 1986. Pg. vii.

is a

in 1935 by B. Traven

Vaf_Le_t_y found lfe-"acufe to be "Lean and brilliant."

Huston in the filn)

it

in words."

and a nan's loss of humanity resulting

pronounced Treasure to be "Trenchant

And that

which have been adapted fron

and then adapted to the screen by J. Huston in 1949. about the wages of sin,

to a large

proceeds through

origins

process works successfully.

of exanples of good filns

and

and preconceptions

establishnent."

it

in Eiluiag_

was a "sincere

literature

literature

But Boyun, again in DpUble_Expglfg, brought to bear on filn

And sinyard

[35]

This

New York: New

the Art e f Sgre_e-u*&dap_telj sg .

New York: New

38 Traven, 8.. The Treasure gl_-the $i.e.rfe_!Afug. Madison: University of W i s c o n s i nP r e s s , 1 9 7 9 . P g . 5 0 . 13

is Dobbs' third

experience with backbreaking work in the story.

a magic nunber in folk

tales,

and Curtain,

on the older

nust rely

And three

The two younger nen in this

t39l

nan, Howard, for

story,

guidance into

is

Dobbs

and out of

the wildern€sso Dobbs (played by Humphrey Bogart his hunanitv

[40]

and crawling,

; it

is a progressive

with a laugh like

hunanness in various

in the filn)

allows

destruction.

a "bark."

[41]

lff

gold fever

to destroy

He is shown squatting, three men lose their

apparent ways in the book, but Dobbst loss

is the nost

obvious in the novie. Towards the end of the story, leaves hin for dead. state.

It

Dobbs has fully

is night,

cold.

He finds

which carry

the leader of the bandits,

boots and burros;

water and drinks.

He throws some but he is

on his belly,

The reflected

is shown confronting

and he is replaced by it.

he suffers

or reptilian

up around his shoulders, reptile-like

and

the literal

image

Dobbs' reflection.

Dobbs is murdered for

loss of his head.

are caught and executed by the mounted police.

Shortly

Ibid.

his

thereafter

The hat of El Jefe

39 Miller' Gabriel. Sc_reening the Novel, Rediscovered Anerican Fiction Eifg. NewYork: Frederick Ungar Publishing Co., 1980. Pg. 93. 40

as

the gold.

a pool of muddy, brackish

Dobbs meets his alter-ego

the bandits

a blanket

And he is cold.

The next day he is shown crawling,

he leads the burros

of El Jefe'

pulls

but only wounds, Curtain

regressed to the aninal,

he is by a campfire.

more wood on the fire, still

Dobbs shoots,

in

Pg. 97.

41 lbid. Pg. 96 (and) Peary, Gerald, and Boger Shatzkin (ed, ). The ltloder-n t-he*Jsvies. New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing, 1978. AlUefj.reg*Nsv_e_l_atd" Pg. 59

14

is shown blowing past their

graves.

these nen, Dobbs and El Jefe, have lost "John

their

Huston simplifies

plot. within

handle in film, Differences

evil.

John Huston's

IrtiIler

it

his adaptation

prospectors

three

"Philosophical

writes:

and Huston...naturally

heads;

around the action

in lfgasUrg

seem less

than in the novel.

digressions

avoids them."

and

in t43l

are difficult

to

[44]

between the novel and the movie include:

the book, the characters

of the men are more of a mixture

the men's personalities

the book the nen save each other's

only Dobbs is saved. -In

their

cuts back on the philosophical

themselves and nore with each other

In the film -In

the novel,

lore while building

Regarding lteggutg,

-In

gold have lost

both of

lives.

nessages and Indian

conflict

greed for

in their

inagery here is that

Huston tones down B. Traven's cynicism in The Treasure of the Sierra

Med-f-e." I42l

adventure

The parallel

the book it

of good and

have been sinplified. lives

This nakes Dobbs seen aII

nunerous tines.

In the filn

the more sinister.

is Curtain

who wants to divided

is Curtain

who talks

up the gold.

In the novie

is Dobbs. -In

the book it

about "dames."

In the film

it

is

Dobbs. -In

the book the bandit

EI Jefe is not present when Dobbs is nurdered.

the movie the leader of the bandits

is encountered three

(again,

the

42 Sinyard, Neil. Filming L-j!era_trge-_ltre-$t__s_f gsres!_Adeple!_iqu. York: St. Martin's Press, 1986. Pg. xii. 43 rbid. 44 MiIler, Gabriel. [gee4ing_the_NSy€1,_j.edi€seys@ F i I u . N e wY o r k : F r e d e r i c k U n g a r P u b l i s h i n g C o . , 1 9 8 0 . P g . 9 9 .

15

New

In

occurrence of the nagical'

fairy

tale

nunber) times,

the final

to nachete

tine

Dobbs' head fron Dobbs' shoulders. -In

the book there are references

novie [45] The last bandits escape.

:

The men had considered opening a movie house with

thoughts of Dobbs involve was presented in a novie,

how, if

shot of the windblown,

of a cactus. nen.

final

in the gold.

their

confrontation

with the

could have him magically

t46l off

word in the book, to act as their

synbolic

his

the director

-The book ends with Howard riding final

which are not present

to filns

torn,

The symbolism is that

to the Indian's

doctor.

"home,"

actually

The novie ends with

the

a

and enpty gold sack ceught on the spines here lies

all

that

renains of the folly

of

t4l1 Upon the release of the film

N_e_jljlqfk*I_iseswrote: small place in this

"To

picture,

in 1949, BosLey Crowther, reviewer

for

the honor of Mr. Huston's integrityr...wonen which is just

one nore re&son why it

the have

is good."

t48l However the book contains the fiIn.

"The

an incredible

fenale

nost honorable and distinguished

role

which is absent fron

dona Catalina

Maria de

45 Peary, Gerald, and Roger Shatzkin (ed. ). lbg_Ugdem_Anerican Novel an{ New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing, 19?8. Pg. 62. -the__UB111eg. 46 Ibid. Pg. 60. 47 47) "The NewYork Tines Film Reviews, 1913-1968." NewYork: Tlr_e_[e_w Yqrk Tines, V. 6, 1970. Pg. 100. 48 Traven, 8.. The Treasure of the Sierle_Medrc. Madison: University of WisconsinPress, 1979. Pg. 186.

16

Rodriguez."

were not ready for filn

adaptation

first

It

a tough talkingt

of the filn

overlooks

Men are the central

But that

initial

several

-The name of the wilderness

tines

nountain

-When Cody is killed

life's

So the

characters.

Upon

are no women

aEsessnent is not accurate. of nen.

This

is the Sierra

Madre, Spanish for

tt

the "wonb" of "nother earth."

orchard,

wonan.

throughout the filn:

-When Dobbs is caught in a nine cave-in

wife.

there

the symbolic role wonen play as civilizers

symbolisn presents itself

ttnother.

liberated

would a.ppear that

it

of any consequence.

the Anerican cinena patrons of 1949

smart thinking

became a MAN'S story.

exanination

characters

a good guess that

It's

t49l

"real

treasure."

the prospectors

by bandits'

to the conflict

read a letter

her husband that

between an agrarian

from his

he has already

This could also be interpreted

-Before they leave the nine site ttwoundsrtt

he is caught in

in time to harvest the apples in their

And she reninds t51]

appears that

t50l

She wishes for his safe return an Eve analogy.

it

society

as a reference

and a nomadic, gathering

the prospectors

found

society.

nust close the nountain's

or wonb.

John Huston uses the canera to illustrate the characters.

Once gold is discovered,

shots" to include all

three protagonists

and reinforce

the interaction

Huston uses a series in the frane.

of "three

The center position

49 Millerr Gabriel. ScreeninA the Novel, Rediscovered Auerican Fiction EilU. NewYork: Frederick Ungar Publishing Co., 1980. Pg. 105 50 Ibid. Pg. 111. 51 Ibid. Pg. 110.

I7

of

in

reflects instancer Cody.

position

Dobbs takes the niddle

Dobbs crouches,

Howard and Curtain. guard the secret

with

It

is

dangling

yet

it

greed for

richer,

story

the synbolic

wiser.

the author,

autobiographical. As a result filning felt

a paradox.

Cody to

of the group

Dobbs in favor

In a final

Indian

child.

of

exanple, Curtain

prospectors

their

heads,

an interesting

Madre.

the Indians,

side-bar

Travents literary

lines

appear in part

about protecting hinself

Walter Huston, John Huston's father,

his

and Curtain

to the adaptation

works involve

death.

onets self;

and

to be

identities true

none the

t53l

in the course of discovering

The author Traven had several

of Treasure he presented

have struggled

They survive,

Codyts orchard and wife.

presents

These story

he was a fanatic

The quest has been a

Howard goes "houe" with

the loss of self journey.

a sick

The two renaining

gold and have not lost

of The Treasure of the Sierra and discovery;

to care for

presents

goes "hone" presunably to the late B. Traven,

of the frane.

between

when he accepts custody of the old mants gold.

is a success.

but plenty

the newcomer

posture,

sides with

For

[52]

he proposes killing

the new man. When Curtain

position

The ending of this

with

that

Dobbs again is placed in the center

takes the center

with

Howard noves to the center

Howard nust leave the canp in order

failurer

in a confrontation

posture

in this

actions.

hands in an aninal-like

of the gold nine.

when he opposes killing nurderr

is to doninate the group's

which of the men's will

in his

identity.

lifetine. During the

to Huston as "Hal Croves. " Croves was unsuitable

for

the role

of

52 Peary, Gerald, and Roger Shatzkin (ed.). The Modern Anerican Novel and Movies. New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing, 1978. Pg. 60. lhe 53 Ibid. Pg. 55

18

Howard as it later

had been described

receive

an Acadeny Award for

John Huston had extensive directorr

Ue&ec_e_Falsgn ('41),

his

('75),

novels

and a host of others.

three stories

to the screen as for

in these stories

adapting

Moby Dick ('56),

Treasure

they are quest novels,

involve

the figurative

The Night

loses control

of his self,

The

compares to Moby exclusively "Ioss

and literal

or loss of the goal of the quest.

headr" or loss of life, character

adapting

filn.

Reflections in a Golden Eye ('67),

Dick and Man Who Would be Kine in that AII

in this

He was responsible

The Bible ('66),

]el[i-D€

nen.

Walter Huston was to

t54l

The Bed Badse_el_Ceuls€e ('51)r

of the IEUana ('64),

involving

role

experience

and producer.

screen writer

Ue[-fbe-lto-ulL

in the novel.

of

The central

and as a result,

Ioses

his life. It

is the author's

contribution

make Treasuqe a success.

"I,

Croves, cane and visited

asked me questions about certain way. t

He agreed.

screenwriter, was drafted great

details.

He was even applauding,

Another successful

process which helped

to the adaptation

adaptation,

I said,

John Huston and he

'Here, present

is .IgbUnV_-GS!_Ei€__8Uby Dalton

world war and never cane back.

this

tGreat ideas, Mr. Croves. t"

owinEl to the author's

when he was twenty years old.

it

Trunbo.In

work as director the story,

He narched off

He left

behind his

t501

to fight sweetheart

and

Joe Bonhan in the Kareen,

5 4 M i l l e r , Gabriel. ScreeninA the Novel. Rediscovered Anerican Fiction iB (and) Stone, F i I n . N e wYork: Frederick Ungar Fublishing Co., 1980. Pg. 88. Judy.

The M y s t e r y o f B . T r a v e n .

Los Altos,

Calif.:

W. Kaufnann, L977. Pg.

73. "CC Studios: Children's Books on Video Cone Out Of the 55 Rotenberg, Lesli. Woodsr" Publishers lteekly. Nov. 1985. Pg. 37. 19

his nother and his sisters. Now he lies from nenory.

terribly He drifts

unconsciousness.

wounded in a hospital

bed and tries

between consciousness

and pain-killer

He thinks

of his body and his

and dreans and hallucinates.

life.

The author

to weave the past and the present whole.

There is not nuch left

gone too.

Great parts

only a gapingr

nouth; nothing

left

of his

prison

of him.

Both his

face are nissing:

He takes

uses strean

life.

but the progress

He lies

nith

a perceptive

And even that

where his

of nedical

person narrative.

alone,

face once was.

science

in silence

He wants out.

oneself

It

struggles,

and white

Differences

doesn't involves

as wounded as Joe isl

There is

in dealing

of his

and in darkness.

Brilliantly,

Using Morse code he taps his is "against

pull

in the

He wants to get outside

regulations.

and noving anti-war just

the rest

pitiful

"

novel written

your heart strings,

struggling,

and he

it

in a grabs

the reader deeply and passionately. rocking,

with

and tapping

One

when Joe

and taps.

In the novie, black

nurse.

enotional,

hold and yanks on them. It

rocks,

Both legs are

enabled hin to be a prisoner

is denied him, it

This is an effective,

finds

from

His eyes, ears, nose and

His sentence is tife;

and he waits,

is not worth living.

makes contact

first

inventory

of consciousness

arns are gone.

the sunshine and be in the conpany of people again.

request.

induced

to go back to the twenty year old wonan he loved.

his broken body has becone.

Such a life

reality

a whole nan, a nan who is now far

war wounds enabled hin to live,

unnatural

feel

into

oozing hole renains

He would have died' horrible

effectively

to sort

color

with

is used to indicate

blue toner

indicates

which scenes are flashback the present

between the book and the movie include:

20

reality.

while

-Introductory rearranged

martial

so that

band nusic

the night

he spends with

-His dad wraps his own fishing treasured,

instead

-Johnny's perceptive

of sending it to "kill

request

pole,

Kareen is

The adaptation

first.

the only thing

his

father

really

away to be wrapped.

ne" is added, as is the attenpt

by the

and stupidity." a powerful

is still

story

out-of-control

situation:

the difference

between dreans and wakefulness.

connunicate,

adaptation

is the story

holds up rather

well

adaptation

crawlsr"

said Variety.

Young Alecr

fron

wounded; not knowing

He has lost totally

literature

the ability

to

dependent upon others

of tine.

and release as a filn

returning

saves the stallion.

In the weeks that

bond. When they are rescued,

for

of all

to his uncle,

Alec's

as he proves the superiority

27

...novie

is shipwrecked.

life.

the castaways forn

they go hone to New York state.

tine.

tale

received nixed reviews

in the world saves the boy's follow,

by l{alter

in 1941, this

in 1979. "Horse gallops

a big race between Alec's

thoroughbreds

Written

However, it

fron an overseas visit

stallion

involves

is the Black Stallion,

of a boy and a horse.

The nost nagnificent

hundredfold

in a war, temibly

in solitude;

to the test

upon its

the story

of a young nan caught in an

or his euthanasia.

Another great It

in the &rny,

and nust now exist

his existence

fastest

sequence is

between the "Padre" and the M.D. is also added: a synbolic

between "faith

Farley.

The flashback

nurse to do so.

-The conflict conflict

is added.

The boy a strong

The cliuax

of

mystery horse and two of the faith

of his

and hard work are repaid "Black. "

a

Alec finds

hinself

he is on a ship; sinks.

in a situation

this

totally

ship founders in a storn,

survival.

The boy repays this

continuing

to care for

debt by feeding

the horse upon their

There is an obvious juxtaposition The boy is young, small,

dangerousr powerful, uncontrollable. for

fast,

no papers.

He is the biggest,

because of his unknown lineage

faith

that

It

starts

during

beautyr

out slow,

and excitenent.

variations.

At first

necessary riding

The Black has

one around,

but

to race against

his

to be worthy of all

his

audience.

the

father

to an awesone

This is a story of involvenent

Especially

of the book follows

is safe at hone. divides

chapter.

builds

interested

with nuch action, in this

story.

in a story

thirteenth

such as

year,

and

ages.

In the movier Alec's

father

father

and the anticipation

the age of AIec, those in their

The novie adaptation

Alec's

and wildest

There are nany levels

of horses of all

book his

but he is

different

in the clouds.

he would not be allowed

the race in the final

would be children

lovers

is wild,

and direction

Alec feels

and the Black proves hinself

has appeal to a large

this

The stallion

the boy had in hin.

The story clinax

tean.

in a world of his own, flying

and

between the boy and the

the control

and fastest,

and

as his neans of

The horse is in his prine,

an unbeatable

He is

Fate intervenes

by rightning,

to civilization.

powerless.

and nearly

Bad enough

the Black on the island

return

The boy is able to provide

the horse:

peers.

is struck

of abilities

and sexual.

the two of them to forn

control.

and provides the black stallion

Providence intervenes

horse.

beyond his

father

the original

is lost

A touching

point

with

several

in the shipwreck.

slight

In the

in the screen play

is when

his winnings with his son fron a shipboard poker game,

seens self-centered

22

and a bit

greedy.

He gets all

the

gold and watches and jewels. to go with

and a story his

love for

special knife

his

And Alec gets a knife,

the figure.

son.

This story,

Other differences

story

that

denonstrates

and the pocket

the figurine,

elements in the legacy this

provide the boy with the ability

-Anthony'

is the fatherts

of a horse,

is about young Alexander the Great and a

The story

steed, one capable of flight.

are inportant

father

leaves his son.

They

to survive.

from the book include:

the junknan is Black in the novie,

This is an updating of an ethnic -In

It

a figurine

minority

the movie Alec has a beautiful,

but Italian

with a racial svelte

in the book.

minority.

nom (played by Terri

Garr),

in

the book she is described as heavy. This is another updating of the story: inclusion

of a single

parent,

who happens to be attractive.

*There is no Joe Russo, newspaper reporter, reporter

becones a radio

The nediun of filn horse in notion; figures

against

hooves and feet.

horses'

screams duringl battle

rhythnic

*

*

with

of excitenent

breathing

as only the nedium of film

children's

addition

of the wildness of the Black.

race, with the labored,

the back-lit

on the ocean, the sky; the underwater shots of

serve to increase the level

"Quality

of the island;

The audio is the nost inportant

his

The newsreel

and audio to the work: the beauty of the

beauty and isolation

the sun playing

as he runs'

excitenent

in the movie.

Another update to the 1970's.

adds visual

adds to the perception breathing

reporter.

the natural

the

to the story.

It

The sounds of his the snake and the other

in the filn.

of the Black,

The climatic

adds to the

can.

*

programing is hard to cone byr"

23

Ellen

Klavan said in

an 1986 publisher's

Weeklv [b6]

on the bottom of the purehasing not publish

literature.

Morton Schindel children's

parents

that

because "preschool-age

ladder."

Children

Do not adapt it.

All

of Weston Woods Studios

books into

for over thirty

, in part

award winning short

yea,rs.

is done by adults

has been turning

films

for

encourage children

An exanple of a children's

picture

for

Do

children.

award winning

the institutional

to read.

are

literature.

He hopes teachers and librarians

t5Z1

videocassettes

do not write

children

narket

will

convince

IEBI

book which has been well

adapted to the

screen is Where the Wild Thines Arq, by Maurice Sendak, and adapted by Weston Woods.

Wbere-the wild

of the picture

book genre.

concern among critics

that

wildness.

However, it

children:

eating,

rebellion,

repentance,

illustrations

ThinAs Are is now generally Initially

nisbehavior,

basic universal

loss of control,

as a nasterpiece

upon the book's release,

the book glorified

contains

recognized

wildness,

and forgiveness.

there was sone

rebellion,

and

elenents of appeal to dreaning,

punishnent,

sailing,

The sparse words and the lush

work together.

In the book these concepts are conveyed by the size of the illustrations on the pager the use of the colors crosshatching within

or texturization.

large white borders.

of the borders

blue and yelrow,

and the use of

The book begins with As Max loses control

upon the illustrations

shrinks

snall

illustrations

to his wildness,

to nonexistence.

the control

When Max

56 Klavan, Ellen. "Tuning In Children's Booksr" publishers l{eekly. 1986. Pg. 28. 57 Roback, Diane. 1986. Pg. 28.

Sept.

"Tuning in Children's Booksr" Publishers Weekly. Sept.

"CC Studios: 58 Rotenberg, tesli. Children's Books on Video Cone Out Of the W o o d s , "P u b l i s h e r s W e e k l y . N o v . l g g b . p g . g b ,

z4

arrives

in the land of the Wild Things,

the illustrations

borders of white no longer serve to control The color illusion

blue is used to signify

When Max returns ragesr"

the drean-state. color

ninute

is also at its

of the illustrations

called

"the

it

small on the screen with

in the book' fantasy,

fill

crosshatching

and fun.

to the original

and color-wash

short enough to keep the attention

adaptation

large borders,

and disconcordant

charn of the original

in

books." The

and as Max loses

are used to represent

of the adaptation

acceptable,

As

dreans,

natches the book,

It

adaptation

as the illustrations &s & result

of the story

is

The sound is as wild, in the book are.

of following

the character

This and

book,

Maurice sendak, in The washinEton Post Book world of JuIy 10, 1988 [60]

59 rbid. 60

Sendak, Maurice.

"Walt

U"et*j;rgt on* lss-t* la-ok* [eet .

is

of a child.

which accompanies this

is highly

picture

work in every detail:

presented in a manner which conplements the story. out-of-control

rumpus

nore of the screen and the borders shrink.

Even the length

The sound track

the "wild

while

Mount Everest of childrents

illustrations

the illustrations

becones blue.

and animator of Where the Wild Things

is faithful

start

a drean

peak.

[59] The adaptation

control

As i{ax sails,

is produced by Weston Woods, and copyrighted

animation

Academy Award winning director

A3-gr Gene Deitch'

on the page.

the illustrations

to hi And at the peak of the wildness,

the crosshatching

The six 1973.

the predoninate

in itself,

the page. The

fill

Disney's Triumph: The Art of Pinocchio," July 10, 1988. Pg. 10.

25

wrote that

the production

of Pinqcchio was "Disney's

"a work of extraordinary

the Disney filnsr"

nonunent to an age of craft

skill,

beauty and nystery,"

in America. "

and quality

the Wizard of Oz and Pinocchio "are superior

"the best of

triumphr"

Sendak feels

to the classics

that

that

and "a both

inspired

then. tt Before Disney adapted Pinocchio, As related

Duerfg". It

by Grinn,

he adapted $now white

Snow White is a fairy

is a very scary and gruesone story.

wicked stepnother nurder,

and insanity.

patterns

traditional

The story

and "unpromising heroine."

cannibalisn

including

tale

It

The story

cinematically production filn'

as Birth

characters. cheap short

captivating.

of a Nation.t'

to detail

It

What is

In this

was found by Frank S.

it

that

as inportant

nakes Walt Disneyts

full-Iength

aninated feature

is obvious in the illustrations

cuts were used, such as "ganging"

an individual

developed a "nultiplane" stood eighteen

feet

personality.

animation canera stand. tall,

illusion

enhance a feeling

This resulted

It

The wicked stepmother (aptly

in an

of reality.

The Snow l{hi*te nade by the Faerie Tale Theatre group is not

26

No

and enabled them to

of the frame.

vein of Grimn or Disney.

No

of the Snow White character.

animate the background and foreground of depth, which help further

of the

the movenent of the groups.

drawn-over photographs are used in the production

cost thousands of dollars,

magic elements and

is a classic,

first

Each of the seven dwarfs exhibits

The Disney studio

of envy, pride,

to be "Sheer fantasy,

of the Filn

of Snow White so good?

great attention

the archetypal

is a story

also contains

inportance.

the nunbers seven and three.

Directort

gay and altogether

delightful'

of great

contains

The Snow White nade by the Walt Disney studios Nugent in the N-I.Tines

and the seven

in the classic

played by Vanessa

Redgrave) is vain, beautiful,

frightening,

trusting,

nontraditional Instead

innocent,

conclusion

left

in any treflective

stepnother's

total

be a strange

alnost

reflections

general

the

that

had been arranged through

the stepmother can no longer

This could be interpreted

story"

as a sign of

punishment for vanity.

and a fitting twistl

since vanpires

see

I find

it

to

cannot see their

in nirrors.

the original that.

But frankly,

child.

ne confused.

surface.

"vanpire

Here is obviously

with

and subnissive

"nagic"

insanity

Snow White is a

and insane.

of dancing to death in red hot shoes, it

the use of sone nonspecific herself

homicidal,

story

an attenpt

to make it

What I find

by the adaptor

nore suitable

unacceptable

is the tendency of the actors

towards the end of Snow White, the canera and arches his

to react

Tale Theatre adaptations to the canera.

in

For instance, Price)

looks at

eyebrows; he does what is known as a "reaction." It

of

I have no problen

(played by Vincent

the nirror

and out of place.

is out of character

children.

for

in Faerie

to tone down the violence

should not have survived

It

the editing

roon. If

for

every great

each good adaptation

adaptation

there

there

are ten bad ones.

novel The Adventures of Huckleberry than any other 1920 Variety

book.

But the results

In 1929 Variety

Paramount-Artcraft, Paranount

"a thrill." production,

Finn has been adapted to filn have been far

Guide by Nash agreed it

In 1931 Variety

27

nore times

to be an

In

"acceptable

produced by

thought Huckleberry

nuch";

was "a good version. "

Anerican

from satisfactory.

pronounced Hucklebemy Finn,

had "captured

then for

Mark Twaints classic

found Huck and Tom , a Paranount release,

visualization."

another

are ten good adaptations,

Finnr

and the Ms!ign_!is!u-fe*

In 1939 Varietv

thought

Huckleberry

the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer production

Finn'

Huck, w&s "a fairly

close

adaptation";

The Adventures of Huckleberry "nonotonous

and dull";

self-conscious"; account. " fanily

there

felt

What is the problem

"terrible.

it:

four

nerit....Better in adapting

camp meeting"

or the "royal

Also a factor

in the failure

the screenplay. novel,

Finallyr

It

versions

stick

and it

to be a "spritety "drive Finn would

and Nashts Motion

was Peary who suggested

of Hucklebemy

Finn,

library

we

to Twain." [61] of Hucklebemy_I.inn

to

the book has the dubious distinction

and society

The Hayes office

"

the Adventures

being the nost banned book in Anerican Twain shows towards religion

considered

according to Variety;

one must consider that

successfully.

was "artificial

it

release of Huckleberry

have been at least

found in none sufficient

First

In 1960 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer produced

yet the t{qtlgn*ffgtuf€-Guide

advocates up the wall"

"though

filn?

ygflefu

Guide agreedr pronouncing

Piqture that

while

Guide by Nash

Finn which was found by the N.Y.Times to be

In 1974 the United Artist

film

and the Motion Picture

to be "the best to date. "

pronounced it

with Mickey Rooney as

history.

nakes this

The lack of respect

a difficult

would not allow any reference

nonesuch" in the adaptations is the unavailability

of

film

to adapt

to the "revival

done in the 1930's.

of the author to assist

the Adventureg of Hucklebemy

in

Finn is a very long

nore than 360 pages.

For an exanple of bad children's have to look farther IhiffC_Afgt in 1983.

then the forty

produced by the British There are certain,

linited,

picture ninute

book adaptation, "fantasy

Broadcasting inspired

61 Peary, Gerald, and Roger Skatzkin (ed. ). [o'11i_eS. New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing

28

opera" Where the Wild

Corporation parts

one does not

and copyrighted

to the opera.

The

Classic Auetican Novel and the Co, I977. Pg. 8.

netanorphosis

place are successful

"live

passages from the book. dialog

of the textr

it

action"

There is a level children.

action

of difficult

eat you up!" but it

conceptual

video adaptation

has been converted to an operatic

of violence

Max brandishes

in the book, it

style.

follows

the

Max, true

to

is presented as:

"I'lIl

behead three toy soldiersl By far

Wild Thing's

another unfortunately

inappropriate violence

I find

this

for children.

indicate

violent

the most condemning departure

for young a fork A

this

unique to

and unblinkingly

wooden sword to cut off

little

fantasy opera adaptation

The operatic

to ne that

deviation

from the book occurs

Instead of gesturing

submission, he uses his

head!

in a story

does not appear in the book. Max proceeds to

when Max subdues the Wild Things. them into

inappropriate

to the "eat you up" concept which follows.

is appropriate

adaptation.

totally

a wooden sword. Though Max chases a dog with

sword, wooden or otherwise,

staring

live

to the Wild Thing's

yyyooouuu uuuppp! "

eeeaaattt

this

transformations

Though this

work, says "I'II

the initial

journey

of Max's room and Max's sailboat

style,

to be totally

the length,

is an adaptation

a

and the level

of a children's

of

book neant

for adults. Another unsuccessful the Bible. put the first

adaptation

Begarding this five

chapters

of the Canadian Filn spectacular of all

adaptation

time. . . , '"

fron

Iiterature

Weinberg wrote:

(of the Bible)

Institute

62 Weinberg, Hernan G.. April 1973. Pg. 99.

of film

has rightly

was John Huston's

"...Huston's

attempt to

on the screen, which Peter Morris called'perhaps

the worst

t62l

"Novel

Into Filn,"

29

literature

/ FiIm Quaterly,

1.t2,

When Hollywood tackled very well into

by then.

second or third-rate

novels,

however, it

could do

As exanples Weinberg cites

T. Dixon's

The Klansna!,

a,-Nst*ion, and the successful T*e_B_i_f!_L*ef"

adaptation

of Gone with

made the

Wind. t63l James Messinger was curious adapted felt authors

adapted to film

"Yes,

consulted and Jacked-off."

"Ken Kesey was the sole voter to an original

permitting

suggested long ago that

article

acceptable

as director

or screenplay writer. rights

adaptations

until

Beverly Cleary has done.

the right

Ken Kesey

Messinger also reports filn

nakers to adhere

t65l by noting

that

"George Bernard Shaw

writers

to make the filn

Here Messinger has made a valid

successful,

adaptation

In response to the

out you signed something long ago

the answer nay be for

[66]

to as nany

process?",

t64l

of forcing

finding

to be raped. "'

your child

own work. "

in favor

work.,.'Like

Messinger concluded his

63

as he could find.

"Were you consulted during the adaptation

responded:

of their

of books which had been

He sent a questionnaire

about the adaptations.

of literature

question

closely

about how authors

have had the author Another option of script

point.

Most of the

of the novel

would be to hold off

approval

version

involved selling

is granted the author,

t6Z1

rbid.

64 Messinger, James R. "I Think I Liked the Book Better: Nineteen Novelists Look at the Film Version of Their Workr" Literature / Filn Ouaterly. VI t2, Spring 1978. Pg. 132.

65 Ibid. Ps. 131. 66 Ibid. Pg. 134. 6 7 K l a v a n , E l l e n . " T u n i n g I n C h i l d r e n ' s B o o k s , " Publr*cbsrc__[ee]Iy. Sept. 1986. Pg. 31. 30

asi

In conclusion, history.

filn

adaptations

of literature

They appear to have a valid

pronotion

of the literature

Iiterature

function:

because the pro-book

the aesthetic

upon which they are based.

has not ceased just

to filn

have a long and valuable

factions

theories

do not hold up to close

of storytelling the luxury

scrutiny.

the luxury

Filn

must fit

a written

"children,

And that

"sharing

criticism

differences.

to elaborately into

a tighter

appeal.

--

filn

technologies,

to

A novel has

describe

scenes and

tinefrane. does.

Considerations

really

Nor are they nutually

narrative

Hendrik Sliekers that

distinct

and Myth Making said:

(book and filn)

are not antithetical. things

or

A novel

A book can of economics

to the nediun of filn.

McConnell in Storytelling storytelling

or literary

an audience as filn

of a nore specialized

are nore important

disapproved,

One nust conpare the two methods

of being able to take the tine

does not have to appeal to as large afford

of

There are many exanples where these

while keeping in mind their

develop characterization.

and

disapprove.

process.

of the adaptation

Adaptation

because the authors

One must avoid the attempt to apply linguistics evaluation

extention

(video)

Literature

and childrents

a book through

the visual

of preserving

interchangeable,

cannot, and vise versa."

in "Children's

"These two methods of --

stories

A filn

can do

t68l

in the Video Fornat"

books are a natural nedia pronotes

t69l

says

combination."

reading, "

68 Mc0onnell, Frank. $torytellinE and Mythnaking: Inares Fron Filn and NewYork: Oxford University Press, 1979. Pg. 4 I,jlerelure. 69 Sliekersr Hendrik. "Children's Literature In the Video Formatr" Illinois l,ibrari_es 67. June 1985, Pg. 497. 31

Rabbit Ears Enterprisesr

which publishes Story Book Classics, has

announcedthey are producing a video adaptation of the children's BiII

for Showtine Cable TV Conpany featuring Robin Willians

story Pecog -

as narrator.

Meryl

Streep is to narrate three adaptations, anong them The Tale of Peter &abbit. But beware. It says later

in the article

great a hit with adults as with their will

find difficult

to accomplish.

that this wiII be "potentially

children,"

than a re-creation of nultiple-leveled

is also possible to extend literature If

of the children's

merits or lack of nerit.

literature

into unacceptable filn,

of literature,

whatever nethods are necessary to get people reading. can be a powerful

tool

rather

It

is

but i t

throuelh filn.

onets goal is to promote the reading

literature

story,

interest.

Each adaptation should be judged on it's too possible to adapt excellent

a feat I feel Rabbit Ears

I suspect that this nay anount to "playing

to the carera" by the actors to the detrinent

all

as

to help achieve that

32

then one should use

Film adaptation end.

of

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38