Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Slaughterhouse-Five: The Novel and the Movie Essay -- Movie Film compa
Slaughterhouse-Five: The Novel and the Movie             In 1972  director George Roy Hill  released his screen  adaptation  of Kurt  Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five  (or The  Children's Crusade; A Duty Dance  With Death). The film made  over  4  million  dollars  and  was  touted  as an "artistic  success"  by Vonnegut  (Film Comment,  41). In  fact, in  an  interview  with Film  Comment in  1985, Vonnegut  called the  film  a "flawless  translation" of  his novel,  which can be  considered an  honest assessment in light  of his reviews of  other adaptations  of his works: Happy  Birthday, Wanda June  (1971) "turned out so abominably"  that he asked to have his  name removed from it; and he found Slapstick of Another Kind  (1984) to be "perfectly horrible" (41,44). (This article was  writen  prior  to  Showtime's  Harrison  Bergeron,  and Fine  Line's Mother Night). A number of other Vonnegut novels have  been  optioned,  but  the  film  projects  have  either been  abandoned  during  production  or  never  advanced beyond an  unproduced screenplay adaptation,  indicating the difficulty  of translating  Vonnegut to the  silver screen. So  why does  Slaughterhouse-Five  succeed where  others fail?  The answer  lies in  how the source  is interpreted on  screen. Overall,  while  there  are  some  discrepancies  that  yield  varying  results, the film is a  faithful adaptation that succeeds in  translating  the  printed  words  into  visual  elements and  sounds which convincingly convey the novel's themes.          While Vonnegut's literary style  is very noticeable in  Slaughterhouse-Five, the  novel as a whole  differs from the  majority of his  other works because it is  personal with an  interesting   point   of   view   techniq...              ...kle  every time  I watch that film,  because it  is so harmonious with  what I felt when  I wrote  the book" (Film Comment 41).  Whether or not someone who has  not read the  novel could get some meaning  from the film is  hard to decide, but if one considers that it would take just  about as  long to watch  the movie as  it would to  read the  book, the decision should be obvious.     Works Cited     Bianculli,  David.  "A  Kurt  Post-mortem  on  the Generally  Eclectic Theatre." Film Comment Nov.-Dec. 1985: 41-44.     Loeb, Monica. Vonnegut's Duty-Dance With Death. UMEA, 1979.     Nelson,   Joyce.  "Slaughterhouse-Five:   Novel  and  Film."  Literature/Film Quarterly. 1 (1973): 149-153.     Slaughterhouse-Five,  dir.  George  Roy  Hill,  with Michael  Sacks, Universal Pictures, 1972.     Vonnegut, Kurt.   Slaughterhouse-Five.   New   York:  Dell  Publishing, 1968.                        
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