"Novels on the Big Screen: An Argument to Joseph Epstien's Article, "Reel Literature" in the Wall Street Journal"
Title: "Novels on the Big Screen: An Argument to Joseph Epstien's Article, "Reel Literature" in the Wall Street Journal"
Category: /Arts & Humanities/Film & TV
Details: Words: 1148 | Pages: 4 (approximately 235 words/page)
"Novels on the Big Screen: An Argument to Joseph Epstien's Article, "Reel Literature" in the Wall Street Journal"
Category: /Arts & Humanities/Film & TV
Details: Words: 1148 | Pages: 4 (approximately 235 words/page)
Movies are Magic. There is no way that anyone can say different. You are sucked in by them, you become a part of the characters' lives, you feel their pain and joy. Movies can do something to you to make you forget who you are, if just for a few hours. Novels can have the same affect. Again you become so involved with the characters that life as you know it comes to a halt.
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end of story.
End Notes
1 Epstein, Joseph. Reel Literature, (The Wall Street Journal. Tuesday, November 20, 2001)
2 Epstein, Joseph. Reel Literature, (The Wall Street Journal. Tuesday, November 20, 2001)
3 Ross, Harris. Film as Literature, Literature as Film. (New York Greenwood Press, 1987) pg. 17
4 Van Gelder, Peter. That's Hollywood. (New York, Harper Perennial, 1990) pg 126
5 Heller, Joseph. "On Translating Catch 22 into a Movie" (New York: Crowell, 1973) pg. 53
6 Perez, Gilberto. The Material Ghost: films and their medium. (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998) pg. 387