This week’s challenge was to read a book that was adapted
into a movie and then watch the movie. I went about this challenge backwards
since the movies showed up on the reserve shelf at the library before the books
were available. This may have skewed the results, but in both cases the visual
images from the movies stuck with me long after I had finished reading the
printed page.
Olive Kitteridge
by Elizabeth Strout
The HBO adaptation wins out partly due to the Maine scenery
and the kitsch of the seventies (and later) set pieces, but mostly due to the
strong performances by actors Frances McDormand and Richard Jenkins as Olive
and Henry. Zoe Kazan is also mesmerizing
as shop girl Denise Thibodeau who works in Henry’s pharmacy. Reading the book,
it’s interesting to note which characters made it into the script and which
were left as background players. Most regretfully is Angela who has a sizable
backstory in the novel, but merely shows up as a lounge singer in the
miniseries.
Me and Earl and the
Dying Girl by Jesse Andrews
In the movie version of this book, the um, movies, make it
all worthwhile. High school students Greg and Earl spend their free time making
parodies of classic movies. When Greg’s mom asks him to befriend a classmate
who has just been diagnosed with cancer, Greg reluctantly agrees. Where other story lines
would turn this scenario into a romantic comedy, Greg wryly notes, Greg and
Rachel simply become friends. When Greg is asked to make a movie for Rachel, he
balks, stalls, and even gnashes his teeth, but ends up making a beautiful piece
he shows Rachel in her final moments. Apart from the movies within a movie, one
of my favorite scenes is Greg’s discovery after Rachel’s death of her whimsical
creations.
1 comment:
What a great post. Really interested in the second one now.
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