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"We should avoid making films out of books", argued Ingmar Bergman. Fortunately, few filmmakers have heeded his counsel. From Edwin S. Porter to Mike Nichols, from D.W. Griffith to Steven Spielberg, American filmmakers in particular have routinely looked to literature and especially to the novel for story ideas; and, in adapting that material for the screen, they have often interpreted it in ways other than the original authors might have intended. Different in its complexities from the classic novels of Dickens, London and Tolstoy to which earlier filmmakers turned, the contemporary American novel, especially the novel that has achieved a kind of cult status, poses a real challenge to the contemporary filmmaker, who must translate its occasionally unfilmable essence for a new audience. Take Two closely analyzes the adaptations of ten such works: Catch-22, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Slaughterhouse-Five, Being There, The World According to Garp, Sophie's Choice, The Color Purple, Ironweed, Tough Guys Don't Dance, and Billy Bathgate. The essays, whose authors include some of the foremost scholars of contemporary American literature and film, offer critical insights into the visions of both the novelist and the filmmaker as well as important discussions of how those visions converge and diverge. The essays thus contribute not only to an understanding of the relationship of any given film to the book which inspired it but also to the lively and continuing debate on the very nature and merits of adaptation itself.Lupack, Barbara T. is the author of 'Take Two Adapting the Contemporary American Novel to Film', published 1994 under ISBN 9780879726416 and ISBN 0879726415.
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