With Color purple by Alice Walker, Celie's life is collapsing. Due to the action of stepfather, she got pregnant, and she immediately took her child away. She was sent to marry an unknown man and had more trouble than many people wanted. Fortunately, even if she could not be with her body, she let her older sister Netti think about and rely on her spiritual and emotional things. At first, the girl's mother was very disgusting.
Color Purple: Novels and movies compare the stories depicting the lifestyle of the early 20th century, but the most important thing is that it defines the love and survival of the two sisters. Vin Spielberg supervised the movie based on it. The obstacle that our sisters must face is to threaten our lives. There are similarities between novels and movies, not differences, but they still explain the theme of the story. There are many similarities between novels and movies.
Sometimes it is brothers and sisters. Or sisters. Or parents and children. Always in my head is Steven Spielberg's The Color Purple. For Spielberg fans this might not be the first choice for that impressive Canon, but still one of my absolute favorites. That's because of this grievous two-storey. The sisters parted, finally gathered in the final scene. This confrontation is the foundation of "impossible", "killing the building", and other countless wonderful movies.
In general, Spielberg's interpretation of "purple" follows the plot of the novel. Films and novels became independent, liberal women who reunited with Nettti and her children after traveling from a serious sexually abused child to a man who was abused. One of the big differences in this movie is that when Shug arrived there was no violence against Celie, but that book included it. Celie is the main focus of the whole novel, but Spielberg's explanation does not hold true. The plot moved from the focus of Seri to Albert until the end of the movie. After Serie left Albert, her life as a free woman was not described in the movie like a novel ("Purple: Books and Movies"). For example, Celie's stores only show up in one scene