Social Networking

Mar 24, 2014

The Great Gatsby

After watching the movie twice in a day, I can't help but fall in love with it. Here's my shout out to everyone want to watch this classic. -DM
What more could any woman want than a man who would look at her in the eyes as if she were the only thing in the world that mattered? It was a love that neither distance nor time could wither. It was a love that neither person nor memory break, and a love that was so powerful, it made one man climb the high society and become one of Long Island’s wealthiest men. Five years is worth the wait for a man like Jay Gatsby (Leonardo DiCaprio) who would selflessly offer his everything to Daisy Buchanan (Carey Mulligan), his ladylove, in The Great Gatsby.

The Great Gatsby is by far one of the best movies that ever grazed theatres.  It is a movie portraying a society of the educated rich. Elite bureaucrats, power-thirsty moguls, high buildings, bigger parties, more crowded streets, and feistier people are only a taste of the more multifaceted personalities and picturesque views the movie has to offer. It’s the kind of movie that leaves your brows furrowing in frustration while pressing the rewind button as you try to understand the complexity of the movie. It’s an eye-and-ear-catching movie that perfectly depicts the kind of society the booming 1920s was. Even the cast of the movie screamed ‘young and ambitious’. 

A box-office hit that earning a total of $351,040,419 worldwide as of 2014, The Great Gatsby is an Academy Award winning movie adaptation of the same book by American author F. Scott Fitzgerald. It was directed, produced, and screen played by Baz Luhrmann, the man behind Moulin Rouge (2001) and Romeo + Juliet (1996). The Great Gatsby is a film of a million layers of intricately thought out portrayals. Starting from the scene, costumes, music, characterization, and actors, the movie evoked a bittersweet mood. At present, the movie had garnered 33 wins and 41 nominations. It’s a movie that bookworms who have read F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby must watch.

The movie pilots to the present, with Nick Carraway (Tobey Maguire) narrating the past events that had led to his current predicament, as is the same with the book version. The transition from present to past being narrated in first person was somewhat a common development seen in some movies such as Tangled (2010), Sunset Boulevard (1950), Fight Club (1999), and The Wolverine (2013), although the special effects did make up for that. The music was pretty catchy, with just the right tune and bit of lyrics to spice up the party scenes. Also, despite the fact that the movie was not shot in the exact place the story took place, instead of New York, the movie was shot in Australia, the difference was not noticeable at all. It definitely looked New Yorkan and not Australian.

Movie characters were in sync with the roles they played. The suave Jay Gatsby was a well-played role by DiCaprio. The two-faced Daisy Buchanan played by Mulligan fooled me. Nick Carraway’s simplicity and innocence echoed through Maguire’s acting. Jordan Baker’s sassy, yet polished elegance was given justice by Elizabeth Debicki’s acting. Both Tom Buchanan and Myrtle Wilson’s capriciousness and tenacity were roles I bet no other person except Joel Edgerton and Isla Fisher, respectively, could play. What added more the sparkle of the well-delivered lines by the movie’s actors and actresses were the props and costumes. Every setting found in the movie was obviously put up with a lot of manpower involved. The costumes, though modernized and not exactly what people from 1920s wore, had a large impact on giving off a 1920s feeling to the movie.

The plot was constructed well; it only partly deviated from the original plotline of the book. Parts from the book that were not emphasized included the relationship shared by Carraway and Baker and the part where Gatsby’s father attended his funeral. Still, the movie was wholesome and captured the true message of the book: the American Dream of prosperity and success.

       Comparing the book and movie, I’d give the movie 4.5 out of 5. Overall, it was a movie the great Mr. Fitzgerald would gladly give his applause to; a kind of movie one wishfully hopes would have a sequel.


Movie trailer:
 

No comments:

Post a Comment