Compare And Contrast The Great Gatsby

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Have two people ever judged one person differently? The same concept comes from The Great Gatsby which clearly illustrates the characters and situations differently from the book compared to the movie. One of the most influential characters of the story plot and most differentiated between the F. Scott. Fitzgerald and the Baz Luhrmann version is Nick Caraway. Nick has the distinct honor of being the only character who changes substantially from the story’s beginning to end in both cases. We see this happen first hand since Nick is the narrator and participant of the whole plot. The novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott. Fitzgerald and Baz Luhrmann’s movie The Great Gatsby demonstrates how one person is viewed differently in two versions. In the …show more content…

Nick is accompanied firstly by Tom and showed into a small living room with luxurious furniture when the couple decide to go off for several minutes, leaving Nick alone. In the book, the situation is more discrete, as it only implied that Tom and Myrtle disappear and reappear before other guests arrive. The movie shows a more explicit version of Nick left alone as he hears Tom and Myrtle having intercourse in the other room. In the movie, after guests arrive and the party gets started, Myrtle’s sister, Catherine, offered Nick a unknown pill she said she had gotten from a doctor in Queens. This was never mentioned in the novel and makes Nick look like a less straight-laced man than he is implied in the book after taking …show more content…

In the novel he is immediately attracted to Jordan and even have sort of relationship through the novel until the end of the summer. On page 18 Daisy says, "Of course you will," confirmed Daisy. "In fact I think I'll arrange a marriage. Come over often, Nick, and I'll sort of—oh—fling you together. You know—lock you up accidentally in linen closets and push you out to sea in a boat, and all that sort of thing" In the film this line is brought up which shows the affection between Nick and Jordan but the matter is dropped through the rest of the film as if there wasn't any relationship between them. Luhrmann’s Nick says he found Jordan “frightening” at first, a word Caraway doesn’t apply to her in the novel. Jordan later gets carried away with another man that she met at Gatsby’s and sort of leaves Nick, which is never brought up in the

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