2 Literary Criticism versus Film Criticism
We shall have to adapt ourselves to the shadowy screen and to the cold machine. […]This swift change of scene, this blending of emotion and experience - it is much better than the heavy, long-drawn-out kind of writing to which we are accustomed. It is closer to life. In life, too, changes and transitions flash by before our eyes, and emotions of the soul are like a hurricane. The cinema has divined the mystery of motion. And that is greatness. (Leo Tolstoy 1908, quoted in Spiegel 1976: 162)The twentieth century is the beginning of the era of the motion pictures. Since the Lumière brothers had shown short film sequences with their cinématographe in Paris in 1895,the new invention could not be stopped. (Cf. Monaco 567) The main film 'Cinema' - the new medium of time had started. Leo Tolstoy has sensed its significance already in the early years. He is aware of its advantages over the novel and the possibilities that this new technology presents. (Cf. Whelehan 1999: 5) Yet, not everybody was of the same opinion as Tolstoy. In fact, film adaptation were then, as well as nowadays often frowned upon and seen as inferior to the fictional source. The changes, which have to be made when transferring a written story into an audio-visual medium, are not seen as a necessity, but as weakness of the film medium. In her book Adaptations - From Text to Screen, Screen to Text, Imelda Whelehan points out different criticism on film adaptations, which I am going to scrutinize. Gabriel Miller criticizes that a filmic source reduces the characters of a book to a simple psychological condition, as film cannot successfully show dreams nor memories. He believes that film cannot stand comparison with a novel's complexity. (Cf. Miller 1980: xiii) Miller shows a lot of prejudices against motion pictures and perceives the novel as 'high' art. His opinion reveals the unawareness of a film's audio-visual but also linguistic means to represent a narrative in a moreover realistic way. Other critics, like Bluestone, understand the differences between filmic and fictional sources in their dissimilar techniques of communication. They determine the distinction of the two media for their different aims, emphases, priorities and ways of production. Bluestone explains:
The reputable novel, generally speaking, has been supported by a small, literate audience, has been produced by an individual writer, and has remained relatively free of rigid censorship. The film, on the other hand, has been supported by a mass audience, produced co-operatively under industrial conditions, and restricted by a selfimposed Production Code. These developments have reinforced rather than vitiated the autonomy of each medium.
(Bluestone 1957: viii) However, some contemporary critics are not anymore influenced by either literary nor film criticism. They moreover examine the interdependency of novel and film. They argue that twentieth century written narratives also use filmic devices, and that these writing tendencies convey a lot about the cinematic trends (Cf. Cohen 1979: 1; Wagner 1975: 26).
This aspect points out the correlation of successful film adaptations intervening with the success of the novel. Nowadays, it is very common that popular films influence the popularity of the literary text. Sometimes the novel is only made famous through the realisation on screen. Here, the question comes up how this works out with the first Harry Potter film version. Does the film help to make the book even more famous? How many people had not known the Harry Potter books before watching the film, and how many have bought the novels after watching the adaptation? Of course, there has been lots of advertisement about it before the film was released, and I suppose no one has managed to not hear about or spot a glimpse of the books. Yet, only certain people had read the novel before seeing the film. When asking fellow students in class, the result was well balanced. Half of the people had read the book, half had seen the film, but only a few had done both. People's preferences play an important role and do explain this reaction. Some favour reading, others prefer going to the cinema, and some like to compare both media to each other. For this reason it is interesting to ask which media has been consumed firstly. It has been done research on the consumption of novels and films. The results are striking. Many people have bought the literary text after watching its adaptation on screen, perhaps for reasons of authenticity to the original, or only of mere interest. It can be argued that a filmic reworking makes a novel more popular. However, it is also documented, that often the literary versions were purchased, yet, not actually read, or never finished. Here, the question comes up, if filmgoers find the origin text inferior to the filmic source (Cf. Whelehan 1999:18). If this assumption turns out to be true, then literary critics have a good reason to worry and feel hostility against film adaptations, as there is a trend to prefer films to books. Especially in the modern youth culture motion pictures are ranked higher than written texts. This issue is resumed in the discussion of popular culture in the last chapter. Prior to that an exposition of the advantages and disadvantages of films and novels is essential.
