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The Comparison of Kazuo Ishiguro's the Remains of the Day and Its Film (Paperback)
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The Comparison of Kazuo Ishiguro's the Remains of the Day and Its Film (Paperback)
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Kazuo Ishiguro's book The Remains of the Day (1984) and its film
adaptation's story is about a respectful British butler who travels
across Britain in 1956. This journey is his first expedition in
England. While he fights with his feelings and affections and tries
to dig under his conscious mind, he is oppressed and worried. We
can read this story as a romantic novel as James Ivory, the
director of The Remains of the Day, saw it. His film is more
romantic than Ishiguro's book. It is really exciting to see how
good directing can change a story, how the lights and colours can
show new aspects of a text, how paralinguistic features can show
more than an unbelievable description. The director, cast, and crew
must be dependent on the tools of filmmaking to reproduce what is
felt, thought, and described on the page. Emotions can be expressed
more easily in a film, or at least differently, since the actors'
play can give more to it with their experience of life. The
filmmakers' production would be their ideas about the book.
Comparing these differences between film adaptations and the
readers' particular view might be very challenging and rewarding in
an English language classroom.
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