Compare the dangerous liaison of Choderlos de Laclos comparing the dangerous contact film of Choderlos de Laclos and Cruel Intentions with the Cruel Intentions of the contemporary film version Sarah Michelle Gellar starring. I will study how French texts are modified according to plots, roles, ethics / values, and themes. I will also discuss how these changes change the meaning of the story and reflect different cultural / historical backgrounds.
Comparing and Differentiating Dangerous Contacts with Novels The movie "Dangerous Contact" by Director Steven Freeras remains faithful to Choderlos de Laclos' novel "Dangerous Relationship". Steven Freerers "betrayed" the novel at the end of the movie, but it made the finish more beautiful and charming. This movie represents a letter novel that merely imply our readers. The novel consists of letters, and we can only feel the thought and emotion of letters. The movie tries to execute these words, but shows only one version of each scene. The difference is that the authors of the novel use text and filmmakers are using photos to explain what is going on. Show more
I will compare the latest movie version Cruel Intentions starred by Dangerous Liaisons of the book Choderlos de Laclos and Sarah Michelle Gellar. I will study how French texts are modified according to plots, roles, ethics / values, and themes. I will also discuss how these changes change the meaning of the story and reflect different cultural / historical backgrounds. Just because of their writing time, there are some major differences between the two pieces.
Here we compare the book style of book "Les Liaisons Dangereuses" of book "Dracula" and Bram Stocker of Choderlos De Laclos. This is because both are examples of famous novels, including movie novels. In this century, I think the possibility that the style itself is the cause of the big success of the former Dracula protagonist. The common feature of these two books is that there is no narrator. In the former, this book is a set of diaries and personal periodicals written by all the people in the book except Dracula's Count. In those articles, the character wrote about the case. In the latter case, the book is a set of characters that are changed by letters. Therefore, the reader needs to keep in mind the whole history with both books. Mary Sherry's Frankenstein is also written like this, but in this case there are only two narrators, so narrative is smoother.