The essays in A Moving Picture Feast discuss every Hollywood
film made from a Hemingway work and represent the most diverse
response yet to the Hemingway-Hollywood relationship. The
contributors examine the popular public image Hollywood created of
Hemingway the man and offer a provocative look at the esthetic
relationship between fiction and cinema. They criticize the films
themselves as art, in many cases with scene-by-scene analysis, and
explore the process by which films are adapted from novels and
short stories. Their research includes inside decisions made by
producers and directors that affected the final versions of
specific films. With its valuable bibliography, listing nearly 400
articles, reviews, and screenplay typescripts, A Moving Picture
Feast will be an important resource for film buffs as well as any
student or scholar of Hemingway. Oliver's collection of 15 articles
about film versions of Ernest Heminway's works conducts an
interesting and worthwhile conversation about the possible
relationships between art in one media and the work it inspires in
another. "Choice"
This collection of 15 chapters by Hemingway film scholars
discusses every Hollywood film made from a Hemingway work and
represents the most diverse response yet to the Hemingway-Hollywood
relationship. The contributors go beyond discussing the failure of
the film medium to be worthy of Hemingway to criticize the films
themselves as art and in one case with scene-by-scene analysis.
They explore the process by which films are adapted from novels and
short stories. Their research includes inside decisions made by
producers and directors that affected the final versions of
specific films. Their analysis is of diverse subjects--from the
dichotomy of Hemingway as private person and celebrity, to the
prevailing film morality of revising original stories to fit
Hollywood standards. This important addition to the small body of
literature on Hemingway films will shed light on a neglected area
of Hemingway studies. With its valuable bibliography listing nearly
400 titles--articles, reviews, and screenplay typescripts--"A
Moving Picture Feast" will be an important resource for film buffs
as well as for any student or scholar of Hemingway.
The book is divided into three sections. The chapters in the
first section explore the similarities and vast differences between
Hemingway's style and general cinematic techniques. The
contributors examine the popular public image Hollywood created of
Hemingway and offer a provocative look at the esthetic relationship
between fiction and cinema. The chapters in the second section
examine the films made from Hemingway novels. One chapter compares
three different versions of "To Have and Have Not"; another
discusses Hemingway's extensive collaboration on the documentary
film "The Spanish Earth." The third section examines the films made
from the short stories. This section includes a compelling
discussion of film noir and how this technique applies to the film
versions of "The KillerS." Another chapter offers a fascinating
comparison of the esthetics of the short stories of "In Our Time"
and the classic D. W. Griffith film "The Birth of a Nation."
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