An Analysis Of The Great Gatsby

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The Great Gatsby is a book written by F. Scott Fitzgerald. The story follows Nick, the protagonist, as he moves to New York City and starts his new life there. Throughout the book the reader meets many horrible characters like Daisy, a self-absorbed and careless beauty, Tom, a brutal and unmoral man, and Gatsby, an ignorant and mysterious fool who wasted his life chasing a hopeless dream. Baz Luhrmann and Woody Allen are just two of the many people who have recreated The Great Gatsby or dedicated a homage to it. Their works have been proven to be effective representations of the film. The Great Gatsby was turned into a film by a director named Baz Luhrmann. By casting the right actors and actresses to portray the characters, Luhrmann effectively …show more content…

In 2011, child molester film director, Woody Allen created a homage to The Great Gatsby. It is a movie called Midnight in Paris. The storyline follows a man named Gil, an aspiring writer and film maker, as he visits Paris with his fiancée and finds inspiration in the strangest way. The characters in Midnight in Paris parallel the characters in Fitzgerald’s novel, except they are slightly more likable. Gil would be a parallel of Nick. Both are protagonists, writers and seem meek and submissive towards the people in their lives that try to walk all over them. Adrianna could be a parallel of Daisy. They are both beautiful and seem to be able to put a spell over the men they desire but when the audience digs a little deeper, their true colors are revealed and it is obvious that everything these women do is for personal gain with no regard for how it affects others. Midnight in Paris is golden, literally. The whole movie has a yellow tint to it. Adding in the gold gives the feeling of class and elegance. When Gil is in his era, the lighting is normal, sbut as soon as he rides away in the old yellow cab, the scene shifts and becomes warm toned. The themes in the sexual predator’s Allen’s movie are almost the exact same as the ones in Fitzgerald’s book. Money was almost everything to Gatsby, as that was his solution to winning the girl of his dreams. In a different way, wealth was also a prevailing theme for Gil. His

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