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The Catbird Seat | Lean Dickens and Admirable Crichton: Film Adaptations of Literature
In the following essay, Kendle discusses the difficulties of translating literature into popular
film, with specific attention to Thurber’s ‘‘The Catbird Seat.’’
My pleasurable recognition of the Aged P, Dickens’s lovable and thematically crucial character who doddered briefly across the screen in David Lean’s Great Expectations (1946), generated a perplexing question. I wondered whether the movie image would have been meaningful to someone who had not spent the previous two weeks re-reading and teaching the novel. This concern, added to others I felt about Lean’s version, led me to a number of more general questions about the process of translating a work of fiction to film. Is a film adaptation an independent entity accessible to...
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