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6 Daring Movie Adaptations That Came From Challenging Source Material

Adaptation is a lofty task. In most cases, screenwriters are attempting to take the complexities of hundreds of pages of prose and turn them into a couple of hours of action and dialogue for us to witness people act out. Directors, in turn, often try to capture the tones and meanings behind the source material that has inspired the film. This is not only a big undertaking, the scale of adapting an especially beloved novel or comic or play must be daunting in itself, but it’s a delicate thing. People tend to be finicky when it comes to adaptations. Be too straightforward with it, and people will be bored, finding the movie version redundant if it does nothing to add to the book. But be too bold in your interpretation, straying from the source material or simply using it as a jumping off point for your own artistic intentions, and everyone loses their minds.

[h2]6) Romeo + Juliet[/h2]

Romeo + Juliet

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And to bring things full circle, I can’t help but come back to Baz Luhrmann and his 1996 adaptation of Romeo + Juliet, starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire Danes. This was one of those Shakespearean adaptations that set the story in modern day but maintained all the original dialogue. That in itself takes some courage, not to mention skill in keeping people engaged when they don’t know exactly what the characters are saying to each other. It’s an interesting piece of work though because it was received, understandably, as a teen romance and marketed as such, even though it’s a relatively worthy retelling of the play. If teen movies are considered the lowest market, and if Shakespeare’s plays performed well with the lower class folk as they are alleged to have done, then this seems entirely appropriate.

Luhrmann seems to be doing this again with Gatsby: envisioning a well-known story in a way that will have resonance for a contemporary audience and presenting in a way that frankly no one else is able to pull off. His style and interpretation of these stories is unorthodox to say the least. He may be using them as a mere platform to play with his own sensibilities, fetishes and ideas. But as far as I’m concerned, anyone who wants to use beloved material to hoist themselves up to achieving something as bold as The Great Gatsby deserves a degree of admiration. Artistic ambition is somewhat an end in itself, and completely reimagining something that everyone feels like they already know inside and out is a way of expanding vision and consciousness—something every bit as ambitious as inventing something purporting to be entirely original.