The article analyzes the changes introduced in the adaptation, including the shift of the contemporary action from Greenwich, England to the American city of Pittsburgh. The way of connecting the present with the past by means of “time travel” is discussed. Consequences for possible interpretation resulting from omitting certain elements of the book and introducing new material as well as changing the order of presentation of some of the scenes are shown. Comments on the film are juxtaposed with interpretations of some aspects of the novel taken from key critical texts on Swift’s book. Also specifically cinematic solutions present in Gyllenhaal’s movie are taken into account
In this paper two British movies — Derek Jarman's The Tempest (1980) and Peter Greenaway's Prospero'...
It comes as no surprise that the critical work focusing on Nathanael West\u27s The Day of the Locust...
This essay examines David Foster Wallace’s literary representations of the Midwest region. Reading T...
In Graham Swift’s fictions, History (more particularly WWII) is often seen through the stories and t...
Gulliver\u27s Travels, by Jonathan Swift, has captured readers\u27 imaginations for almost three hun...
Foreign films achieved a high level of distinction and visibility in the United States this year, bu...
This paper analyzes the notion of environment pictured in Gulliver’s Travel: A Voyage to Lilliput by...
Graham Swift’s Waterland (1983), which marks the zenith of Swift’s literary career is an outstand...
With reference to Jennifer Egan’s A Visit from the Goon Squad (2010), Amy Waldman’s The Submission (...
Douglas Adams and Jonathan Swift are satirists who lived and worked 250 years apart. Swift's eightee...
To Kathleen Adams t discussion of George Eliot film adaptations (Review, 1977), I would Iike to add ...
The process of translating works of literature to the silver screen is a rich field of study for bot...
Neil Gaiman’s depiction of America as a mythic place in American Gods explores “the soul of America”...
Review of: "All the Wild that Remains: Edward Abbey, Wallace Stegner, and the American West", by Dav...
This article examines a map of the English coast surrounding Romney Marsh in 1895, hand-drawn by For...
In this paper two British movies — Derek Jarman's The Tempest (1980) and Peter Greenaway's Prospero'...
It comes as no surprise that the critical work focusing on Nathanael West\u27s The Day of the Locust...
This essay examines David Foster Wallace’s literary representations of the Midwest region. Reading T...
In Graham Swift’s fictions, History (more particularly WWII) is often seen through the stories and t...
Gulliver\u27s Travels, by Jonathan Swift, has captured readers\u27 imaginations for almost three hun...
Foreign films achieved a high level of distinction and visibility in the United States this year, bu...
This paper analyzes the notion of environment pictured in Gulliver’s Travel: A Voyage to Lilliput by...
Graham Swift’s Waterland (1983), which marks the zenith of Swift’s literary career is an outstand...
With reference to Jennifer Egan’s A Visit from the Goon Squad (2010), Amy Waldman’s The Submission (...
Douglas Adams and Jonathan Swift are satirists who lived and worked 250 years apart. Swift's eightee...
To Kathleen Adams t discussion of George Eliot film adaptations (Review, 1977), I would Iike to add ...
The process of translating works of literature to the silver screen is a rich field of study for bot...
Neil Gaiman’s depiction of America as a mythic place in American Gods explores “the soul of America”...
Review of: "All the Wild that Remains: Edward Abbey, Wallace Stegner, and the American West", by Dav...
This article examines a map of the English coast surrounding Romney Marsh in 1895, hand-drawn by For...
In this paper two British movies — Derek Jarman's The Tempest (1980) and Peter Greenaway's Prospero'...
It comes as no surprise that the critical work focusing on Nathanael West\u27s The Day of the Locust...
This essay examines David Foster Wallace’s literary representations of the Midwest region. Reading T...