Visualising the Internal - the transference of emotion and theme through cinematic language in the adaptation of novel to screen
Abstract
The exegesis investigates how the interiority of emotion and
overarching premise in a novel is visualised in the novel to film
adaptation process. It specifically looks at the varied
collaborative stages of filmmaking – from development,
scriptwriting, pre production and principal photography, as a way
of acknowledging the process and contribution of the film crew as
novel is turned into film. By investigating the interpretive
choices and decisions of three specific roles – the
screenwriter, cinematographer and director – I break down the
contributions and collaborations of these key creative
practitioners at distinctive moments of the production process,
to gain a greater understanding of how the translation of emotion
and premise interiority from novel to screen occurs. As a case
study, I investigate the collaboration between the late
screenwriter/director/adaptor, Anthony Minghella CBE, and his
Australian director of photography, John Seale ACS ASC, to
explore what occurs between the cinematographer and director, as
they work towards turning the screenplay into images and
performance. My practice-led research, a feature length
screenplay of the Rodney Hall novel Love Without Hope (1997),
informed my research, not only into the role of the screenwriter
as interpreter, and how she writes for a technically skilled
crew, but also as a way of understanding the nature of the
reader’s individual sensibilities when it comes to adapting a
source that is not their own. SCREENPLAY: Lorna Shoddy was once a strong young woman who bred horses, ran
her farm and loved a man, Martin, that many in her small town did
not approve of. Now she is old, alone and finds herself in an
asylum for the insane. It is 1983 in Australia, and the Master in
Lunacy has the power to take a woman who he deems unfit to look
after herself and put her away against her will. To keep herself
sane, Lorna retreats into memory, summoning her past to make
sense of her present, until she is able to remember a moment long
ago, a decision she made that changed everything; and the grief
and guilt that caused her to end up where she is. It is only
through re living this moment, truly accepting and acknowledging
it, that she can forgive herself, find the strength to escape,
and head home.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description