Link to Prezi Presentation: http://prezi.com/f_fe3lmbwutk/book-project-2/
Monday, April 30, 2012
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Film Adaptations
In adapting Fight Club to the big screen, a filmmaker would have obvious difficulties with the dialogue between the narrator and whoever he is communicating with. In the novel, the narrator is basically all reflecting and when he is reflecting upon what was said, he goes from the actual quote of the person he is talking to back to “then I said...” but not in quotations. Bringing that dialogue to life can be done, and it was some well in the modern movie depiction of the book, it is just not as easy as a cut and paste type script. Looking at the plot, since the whole book is a reflection, the plot basically goes from big even to big event and skips around. I think that would be hard to recreate because the actors would actually have to transition whereas the book can just skip around.
Three scenes that would be essential to keep for the movie adaptation would be the scene with Tyler and the lye on the narrator’s hand, the narrator beating himself up and making it look like his boss did it, and the soap factory/the fight club members living in the house with Tyler and the narrator. The scene with the lye was important because it permanently scarred the narrator and then that symbol started showing up on all the members of fight club or project mayhem. The beating himself up scene is important because it shows the narrator’s transformation as a person and how his personality is getting closer and closer to that of Tyler’s. Finally, the soap factory scene is important because it shows how large the group has grown and how it tore those men away from their lives. It shows how drastically fight club was impacting the whole world they lived in.
Two scenes that could be cut from the adaptation would be the scenes with the waiters and the narrator working in the fancy hotel and the ending scene where the narrator is in a mental hospital or dead. The hotel and waiters scenes were funny in the book, but were not present in the actual film adaptation and I thought the movie still did a fine job depicting the book without those scenes. The ending scene was very confusing and would have been really hard to recreate for the movie so it also could have been left out.
Since I have finished the book and there is already a film adaptation of Fight Club, I would venture to say that the adaptation fits the book really well. The actors chosen do a great job of depicting the characters like I would have imagined and the jumpy qualities of the book translated well onto the big screen. I would recommend that someone read the book or watch the movie. I watched the movie first and I don’t think it ruined any elements of the book, so whatever order someone experienced them wouldn’t matter in my opinion.
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
Book 1 Project
Book 1 Project
Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Picoult
In order to get Nineteen Minutes into the spotlight, I propose the idea of creating and establishing a tour centered on anti-bullying. This tour would be organized to travel from school to school and give a presentation on bullying and the effects it can have; from small scale to large scale like those occurring in the novel. The novel would be a focus point of the tour and even though that particular story is a work of fiction, it can be related to other school shootings like Kent State, Columbine, Virginia Tech, and more recently, Chardon. Even as a work of Jodi Picoult’s creative genius, the novel poses a very important problem that occurs in all schools across the country. This tour would benefit the community and raise awareness of bullying as well as do wonders for the novel by putting its name out there.
My idea for this tour comes from multiple places in the novel. Throughout the court cases, interviews, and day by day events, it is the sole detail that ties the whole book together. One particular example of this is when Peter writes a love email to Josie and it is read by Josie’s friend, Courtney, before Josie ever got a chance to see it. Courtney forwarded it on to another boy in their friend group and he “spammed” it out to the entire school to embarrass Peter. Peter was then tricked by one of the boys into going up to Josie, thinking she liked him back. Peter was had his pants pulled all the way down in front of the whole cafeteria because of that confrontation. That one example was just one of millions of reasons that drove Peter so fulfill the act of his shooting. He was bottled up and then the say came where he exploded all his emotions and people died because of it. A line in the novel that sums this up perfectly is, “Even though those people died today, Peter Houghton was dying for 17 years."
Another problem with that affected Peter was his craving to be accepted. He was bullied and bullied and never felt that he could fit in with the other kids at his school. In one quote from the novel, Peter summed up exactly how he was feeling, “When you don't fit in, you become superhuman. You can feel everyone else's eyes on you, stuck like Velcro. You can hear a whisper about you from a mile away. You can disappear, even when it looks like you're still standing right there. You can scream, and nobody hears a sound. You become the mutant who fell into a vat of acid, the Joker who can't remove his mask, the bionic man who's missing all his limbs and none of his heart. You are the thing that used to be normal, but that was so long ago, you can't even remember what it was like.” His identity was important to Peter, at least on the inside. Being bullied all throughout his years caused him to feel invisible, worthless, and like he didn’t matter to the school; and if he didn’t matter, then who would care if he opened fire on the few people that had been hurting him for so long? In another line from the novel, Peters intentions are made clear, “One day Peter, I promise you, everyone will know your name." Everyone at some point in their lives has the craving to be accepted and know among their peers. Add this craving on top of constantly being bullied and there is a recipe for disaster.
I think that the idea of having a tour focusing around bullying would work in selling the book Nineteen Minutes because it really points out the importance of picking up the signs that a child is struggling and suffering. If this tour was to travel to dozens of schools across the country, the book would be recommended and sold at all of these places and be planted in the minds of the audiences. I also think that it will do good and help attempt to cease the bullying problem that is occurring everywhere across the country.
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