Sunday, February 26, 2017

Blog Post # 5

So last week in class we watched the movie Arrival. It was based off of Ted Chiang's The Story of You.

Both the short story and the movie did a great job in the telling of the story. With the story, it was easier to see the detail and description more in depth than what was shown in the movie.  
When watching the movie I noticed they didn’t show the physics part from the story. It would have been cool to see that play out but also it would be a hard concept to produce.

The short story is more straightforward about the order of Louise's experiences. We know before the first section break/memory that the first alien contact happened before the child was born. The short story proceeds along a traditional structural route of a protagonist remembering two things from the past, the first alien contact and what we come to learn is the memory of the pre-knowledge gained by the protagonist.

Watching the movie it was easier to grasp what was written out in the story. It was easier to tell what was present and what was future. Arrival puts everything into perspective. The movie has a way of capturing the emotion of the actors as well as the audience in a way that leaves them stunned.

Arrival also layers in some important secondary notes that add nuance to that easy takeaway. Because it’s not just deciphering the words that someone else is saying that’s important: It’s the whole framework that determines how those words are being pinned to meaning. We can technically speak the same language, but functionally be miles apart.

There’s only so much you can put into a movie but with a book there is a lot more. The description and the feeling of the characters comes more to life in the short story than it does in a film. The film just quite literally brings the feelings to life associating it with a real person but it doesn’t give off the same effect. For a movie with so many complicated ideas, it doesn’t waste any more time on exposition than is absolutely necessary. Arrival is serious and smartly crafted, shifting around like a Rubik’s cube in the hand of a savant, nothing quite making sense until all the pieces suddenly come together.

The film’s premise hinges on the idea, shared by many linguists and philosophers of language, that we do not all experience the same reality. The pieces of it are the same — we live on the same planet, breathe the same air — but our perceptions of those pieces shift and change based on the words and grammar we use to describe them to ourselves and each other.

The story and film set a new perspective on our lives. The time travel aspect as well as the fact of knowing the future and decisions made by the characters sets an impact on the viewers.

Either way, I enjoyed both and it’s one of those “watch again” or “read again” pieces. I’d recommend it to others. It’s a movie worth seeing. It keeps you thinking throughout and makes you wonder about your own future.

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Blog Post # 4: Film Adaptations

       So books are made into movies. Shocking, I know. For me, reading is my life so I tend to read the book first then watch the movie, well unless I grew up watching the movies before I could even read the books.

      Like for most, Harry Potter was the huge thing while growing up. I watched the movies first of course then I went and read the books once I got old enough to do so. Reading the books opened a whole new world. There was much more detail and insight the movies just couldn't capture. Once I read the books, I went and watched the movie again and I could point out what was cut from the book and what should have happened. I always annoyed the people I watched the movies with.

     Harry Potter was probably the only book that the movies were very close to. Only a few changes here and there but other than that, they were pretty much the exact same. J.K Rowling of course, made that  happen.

    But books I've read like The Maze Runner, Perks of being a Wallflower, The Hunger Games and several others have seemed to disappoint me when I watched the movies. We would be here all day if I had to explain why for each one.

    One series in particular I wished was never made into movies was Stephanie Meyer's Twilight Saga. The books were just very benign and to be honest you could skip half the book and not miss anything important. There is just way too much detail and the storyline drags on forever.

     Percy Jackson! Those were some great books but man the movies weren't up to par. They were the worst in adapting Rick Riordan's novels. The books captured his vision beautifully but when it came to the movies the vision was lost. Going off on that The Giver was a benign book and the movie made no sense. Like why is there a spaceship at the end?

Sometimes, I will watch the movie before I read the book and I

         


 Unless the movie bored me to death.